
Wolves considering bringing in former Al Shabab sporting director Domenico Teti as part of recruitment overhaul
The future of sporting director Matt Hobbs is in doubt as coach Vitor Pereira is expected to take on a more hands on role at Molineux.
Pereira worked with Teti previously in Saudi Arabia.
Italian Teti held roles at Verona, Sampdoria, Lugano and Apoel Nicosia prior to joining Al Shabab in 2023.
Talks are ongoing with the 48-year old, who left his job as Al-Shabab sporting director in October last year, now in contention to become technical director.
Discussions are underway and understood to be progressing.
Wolves were dragged into a relegation fight last season but the appointment of Pereira in December as new head coach following the sacking of Gary O'Neil saw the club comfortably avoid the drop.
They are close to agreeing the sale of Rayan Ait Nouri to Manchester City and are among clubs to have checked on St Etienne forward Lucas Stassin.
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Metro
20 minutes ago
- Metro
Michael Owen suggests Man Utd's new £62.5m signing has an 'attitude' problem
Michael Owen has raised concerns over the 'attitude' of Manchester United's new £62.5m summer signing Matheus Cunha. United recruited Cunha from Wolves in June and the 26-year-old made his Premier League debut for the Red Devils in Sunday's defeat to Arsenal. Cunha shined in the top-flight for Wolves last term, conjuring up 15 goals and six assists across 33 games for the West Midlands club. But former United striker Owen feels there is a 'question mark' over the Brazilian who 'caused fights on numerous occasions' at Wolves. Metro's weekly football newsletter: In The Mixer. Exclusive analysis, FPL tips and transfer talk sent straight to your inbox every Friday – sign up, it's an open goal. 'My only question mark is his attitude,' Owen told AskGamblers. 'He gets sent off a lot, he waves his arms a lot, and you've already got someone like that alongside him in Bruno Fernandes. 'From a talent point of view, he's absolutely there. And maybe being at Manchester United, being at a huge club like that, might put some manners on him. 'You can't go around grabbing people's glasses off them after a game, getting sent off, arguing with referees, and causing fights on numerous occasions like he did at Wolves. 'But when you're the outstanding player and when you've been carrying the club, when all that pressure's on you and all those different things, then you can understand it a bit. 'When you go to Manchester United, you're in the public glare even more, and you need to behave that way. 'If he irons that out, I think he could be a brilliant signing and as I say, going to Manchester United might put manners on him because there are lots of big stars there, and there have been the greatest stars of all time there in the past. 'He's not going to come in and feel like a one-man band like he might've at Wolves. So, I think it's a brilliant signing. But that's my only question mark.' Owen believes Bryan Mbeumo, who joined United in a £71m deal from Brentford this summer, is 'probably the total opposite' to Cunha. More Trending 'Mbeumo is probably the total opposite,' Owen added. 'Again, you're probably going to get what you've seen over time: direct, quick, and can score with both feet. 'Possibly something Manchester United have been lacking is directness in play and pace, really. 'So that's quite a signing, you're not really questioning too much. You'd expect it to go okay. 'But I'd be really excited by Cunha. I think he could be exceptional, with the provisos I just mentioned.' MORE: Tottenham make contact to sign £80m Chelsea target as Eberechi Eze alternative MORE: Theo Walcott makes worrying Viktor Gyokeres claim after Arsenal's defeat of Man Utd MORE: Borussia Dortmund in advanced talks for £40m Chelsea star after Juventus attempted transfer hijack Your guide to the week in football. Exclusive analysis, FPL tips and transfer talk – sign up, it's an open goal.


The Independent
20 minutes ago
- The Independent
GCSE student brings along unusual ‘best friend' to pick up results
A GCSE student collecting her results brought along an unusual friend for moral support - her pet sheep. Milly Johnson, a young shepherd, had 'best friend' Kevin the sheep come along as she picked up her results from Tarleton Academy near Preston in Lancashire on Thursday (21 August). 'I was quite nervous as I knew I couldn't change what happened but Kevin helped a lot by being here,' she said, reflecting on his 'chilled' demeanour. She said the four-year-old North Ronaldsay sheep 'comes pretty much everywhere with me', revealing he also accompanied her to her prom, wearing a matching halter to Johnson's dress.


The Independent
20 minutes ago
- The Independent
Rave culture, lycra ‘nuns' and ‘sexual healing': Inside the evangelical cult left unchecked in the Church of England
Typed neatly on headed notepaper, the instructions for Reverend Christopher Brain's 'homebase team' were clear. The group of predominantly young, attractive women, who had devoted themselves to a church movement they believed was changing the world, were 'to do anything' their leader required. This included preparing his meals, cleaning his home, looking after his child, 'honouring and praying' for him and always putting his needs before their own. It also required them to sleep at his house for up two nights per week as part of a 24 hour, seven-day rota of unpaid work to leave him free to spread the word about the mission of the Nine O'Clock Service (NOS). Brain had been tipped for a great future in the Church of England after his revolutionary 'rave-style' worship attracted hundreds of young people to his 9pm services in Sheffield. He was preparing to take the movement across the Atlantic to San Francisco. Detailed lists of homebase team duties included washing, ironing, mopping the floor, walking his bull terrier, Badger, and answering the phone. Although they were to prepare his meals – including a dessert – they were instructed to eat after Brain and his wife unless they were explicitly invited to join them. But, sadly, the demands placed on some women who found themselves in Brain's church movement did not stop there. Despite most not believing in sex before marriage, many were expected to give 'sensual' massages to the controlling and charismatic evangelical preacher, who told the women he was helping them to overcome their sexual repression. He was usually in his underwear during the late-night back rubs to relieve 'tension headaches' in the attic bedroom of his marital home, which was paid for, decorated and meticulously maintained by NOS. The women, who were sometimes referred to as 'the Lycra Lovelies' or 'the Lycra Nuns' because of the revealing clothes they wore while they cleaned, feared they would be ostracised if they refused. Many believed he was a form of prophet and one admitted she viewed him as 'almost a God'. This week, 30 years after his evangelical cult operating in the Church of England collapsed in controversy, he was found guilty of abusing nine women. The 68-year-old, who until recently ran a design consultancy in Wilmslow, Cheshire, told the jury he was the 'most radical ordained vicar there was' as he defended his sexual encounters with women in his congregation. 'I wasn't a traditional vicar, I was someone on a journey of radical research and experimentation,' he said, as he insisted any sexual contact with the women was consensual and disputed other incidents ever took place. A panel of eight men and three women found him guilty of 17 counts of indecent assault against nine women between 1981 and 1995 following a seven-week trial at Inner London Crown Court. He was acquitted of 15 further counts of the same offence. The jury was discharged without reaching verdicts for one count of rape and four more counts of indecent assault. Prosecutors now have 14 day to decide whether they seek a retrial on those counts. The seeds for the church movement began in the early 80s with his Christian rock band Present Tense. He and a group of acolytes - united by their belief that they did not fit into a traditional church congregation - developed a new type of worship inspired by 80s rave culture and the evangelical preaching of charismatic US pastor John Wimber, whose services were known for so-called 'miracles' and speaking in tongues. At its height, NOS attracted up to 600 congregants to light and music-filled services at St Thomas' in Crookes, Sheffield, later moving to a larger venue at Ponds Forge leisure centre. At one stage there was a mass confirmation service of 93 members, said to be the largest group they had ever confirmed in one church. The Archbishop of Canterbury elect, George Carey, was so enthusiastic about its potential to attract young worshippers that he told Brain he would be happy to see a NOS in every town and city in the country. By 1995, when Brain was finally confronted by church leaders who had been approached with claims he had abused up to 40 women, he replied: 'I thought it was more.' He later admitted to 'improper sexual conduct with a number of women' in the church in a bombshell 1995 BBC documentary, conceding that some members of the homebase team would massage him late at night if he needed. He denied this was abuse even though he obtained sexual gratification, claiming his relationships with the women were close and affectionate. He said he was repentant, willing to change and to put things right. However, giving evidence in his own defence almost 30 years later, he backtracked, claiming he 'over-accepted responsibility' in the programme. Wearing a dark suit and shirt, with thick rimmed glasses, he had to be reminded several times to slow down and speak clearly as he rushed to defend his actions. Asked by his lawyer, Iain Simkins KC, 'what on earth possessed you to have a back massage from another woman' when he was married with a young child, he responded: 'Why not?' Sometimes this developed into sexual touching, he said, explaining his marriage was 'pretty open', but if liaisons progressed to full sex it would be cheating. "With some of my closest friends it would be kissing sometimes, occasionally massaging, stroking,' he said. 'Anything more than that we would back off.' For the women, however, the encounters were often something they said they submitted to in order to survive. One woman, who said she was 'brainwashed' by the priest, alleged on one occasion she was invited to his home while his wife was away in 1983 or 1984, where he pinned her down and raped her, although jurors did not reach a verdict on this count. She told the court she was moving her head 'from side to side' and 'saying no', adding: 'I couldn't get him off me.' Afterwards, he told her to have a bath, the court heard. Although she considered going to the police, she felt it would be too traumatic and wasn't ready for her family to know. Another survivor said she viewed Brain as a form of prophet who told her their contact was part of her 'sexual healing'. He discouraged her from staying in touch with her family and friends, leaving her in fear of being cut off from her only community. She told the court she felt trapped and was left suicidal after 'hundreds' of alleged encounters in which she would sit on Brain's lap and simulate sex because she had an 'innate' need to please him. 'I was never aroused, it wasn't exciting. It was more just a way of surviving I suppose,' she said. 'You did what you thought he wanted in order to keep him appeased. It was nothing to do with passion or expression.' Brain was acquitted multiple counts of indecent assault with the woman. Over the years, several people tried to raise the alarm about Brain's increasingly megalomaniacal tendencies, but he was seemingly given considerable leeway by Anglican church leaders. When Brain took holy orders in December 1991, 'signs of grandiose self-regard were already present' and large sums of money were spent finding the robes worn by the actor Robert De Niro in the movie The Mission for him to wear at his ordination, prosecutor Tim Clark KC told the court. Marilyn Parry, Brain's personal tutor as he was fast-tracked for ordination, told her superiors he was arrogant and failed to meet deadlines, but the diocese did not share her views. "They felt he should be given some slack because he was running such an important ministry for the church,' she said. Dr Mark Stibbe, a former curate at St Thomas', was also rebuked in 1993 by then-Bishop of Sheffield the Rt Rev David Lunn for expressing fears about "extremely disturbing" NOS services featuring "scantily clad young girls gyrating". Dr Stibbe told the jury he had his 'ecclesiastical wrists slapped' for raising concerns and was told: 'We don't conduct witch hunts in the diocese.' While members gave up their jobs, paid into a 'common purse' and some even donated their inheritance to NOS, Brain lived far more comfortably. He was provided with a home, a car and a credit card to eat out. In 1994, the Brain's moved into a five-bedroom seventeenth century farmhouse in the Pennines given to the NOS Trust, a charity set up to handle the movement's finances, by two senior members of the congregation. It had been renovated to Brain's specifications, including a recording and rehearsal studio for musicians and dancers in a converted stable. By the time NOS finally collapsed in August 1995, after a whistleblower took allegations of widespread sexual abuse to Sheffield's archdeacon Stephen Lowe, Brain claims he had already resigned his role as leader as he focussed on establishing himself in California. In an explosive meeting at NOS's offices a few days later, members gathered and shared their experiences. Reactions were extreme, with some collapsing in tears. Some of the women he hurt were left confused and initially defended the man they thought was their spiritual leader, but later came to realise they had been drawn into a cult. For others, the scales fell from their eyes instantly. Initially, the Diocese of Sheffield provided counselling for at least 20 women alleging sexual impropriety. In the weeks that followed up to 150 people left traumatised by their time in NOS were provided support, The Independent reported in 1995. Brain resigned from holy orders in November, days before the BBC's documentary on the scandal was due to air. Astonishly, no police investigation was launched into the abuse until 2019. Detective Superintendent Eleanor Welsh, of South Yorkshire Police, said: 'Brain is a devious and arrogant sexual predator who caused these women significant harm through his abuse of power and cruel manipulation of their faith. 'While I am pleased with the guilty verdicts, I know for the victims it can never take away what Brain did to them. However, I hope that it brings some comfort to know they have had a voice, they have been heard, and the jury has accepted that Brain is a serial sex offender.' Following the trial, the Bishop of Sheffield issued an unreserved apology to Brain's victims for 'institutional failures' by the Church. The Rt Rev Dr Pete Wilcox also announced an independent Safeguarding Practice Review to examine 'safeguarding responses, culture, and processes' so lessons can be learned. "What happened was an appalling abuse of power and leadership that should never have occurred,' he said. 'Where concerns were raised in the past and were not acted upon properly, that was a failing of the Church. For those institutional failures I offer an unreserved apology.'