logo
Arsenal star Oleksandr Zinchenko forced to close restaurant after one year as he puts it up for sale for £1.9m

Arsenal star Oleksandr Zinchenko forced to close restaurant after one year as he puts it up for sale for £1.9m

The Sun6 days ago
OLEKSANDR ZINCHENKO has suffered a kitchen nightmare - by having to close his new restaurant after just one year.
The Arsenal star took the bold gamble to open a high-end eatery in Ukraine 's capital Kyiv last summer.
6
6
6
6
6
Zinchenko and wife Vlada Sedan named the restaurant Inch, referencing his surname and the concept of slow progress.
The former Manchester City left-back gave it a sports theme, decorating it with shirts from Ronaldinho and other high-profile footballers.
But rumours about its future began to swirl before it closed its doors last month.
Zinchenko, 31, has now put the business on the market with a £1.9million ($2.5m) price tag.
The estate agents handling the sale announced its assets as: "Equipped kitchen, designer interior, favourable location.
"Ready-made business with profit. Everything is included - equipment, brand, documents."
Kyiv has been subjected to air strikes since the Russian invasion of Ukraine in 2022.
Zinchenko helped City serve up four Premier League titles, an FA Cup and four League Cups after arriving from Russian club Ufa in 2016.
Arsenal paid £30m for him in 2022.
He has since made 91 Gunners appearances, scoring three goals.
6
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

RB Leipzig ask about transfer for Chelsea star during Xavi Simons talks but Blues don't want to lose player
RB Leipzig ask about transfer for Chelsea star during Xavi Simons talks but Blues don't want to lose player

The Sun

time26 minutes ago

  • The Sun

RB Leipzig ask about transfer for Chelsea star during Xavi Simons talks but Blues don't want to lose player

RB LEIPZIG are keen on signing Chelsea starlet Tyrique George, according to reports. The Blues are in advanced talks to sign £60million-rated RB Leipzig star Xavi Simons. 3 3 Simons, 22, missed the Bundesliga side's most recent friendly and it is believed that he has played his last game for them. During talks regarding the Dutchman, transfer expert Fabrizio Romano claims that RB Leipzig have enquired about George's availability. George, 19, enjoyed a breakout season for the Blues last term, making 26 appearances in all competitions. Due to Chelsea 's huge squad, however, the winger is said to see his future away from Stamford Bridge, at least for the 2025-26 season. The Blues would like to keep George, but a permanent transfer has not been ruled out. In addition to RB Leipzig, Borussia Monchengladbach are also said to be keen. Earlier this year, SunSport was given an insight into George's incredible rise. Bismark Odoi, father of ex-Chelsea star Callum Hudson-Odoi, told SunSport: "He is a few years younger than my son but he was very noticeable from his early years. "We all used to take them, but I'm happy that he's making his parents proud because I tell you it's a lot of hard work, people only see the results, but the work is massive. "Tyrique was very close to another guy who was similar in stature to him, called Apau I think, a very good young player during their under-12 days. 'Not everyone makes it, but yeah, he was there. I think he was one of the youngsters who played very well knowing their parents were watching too.' Chelsea have confirmed the £37million signing of Jorrel Hato from Ajax. Remarkably, the acquisition took spending on defenders to an astonishing £360million under BlueCo. 3

'We'll be ready for Europe,' insists Brendan Rodgers after Celtic need late winner to see off St Mirren
'We'll be ready for Europe,' insists Brendan Rodgers after Celtic need late winner to see off St Mirren

Daily Mail​

time26 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

'We'll be ready for Europe,' insists Brendan Rodgers after Celtic need late winner to see off St Mirren

Brendan Rodgers promised that Celtic will be ready to qualify for the Champions League despite labouring to an opening day win over St Mirren. The Parkhead men required Luke McCowan's deflected strike with three minutes left to avoid slipping up as they began the defence of their crown. Rodgers finds out tomorrow which side Celtic will face in the Champions League play-off, with Sturm Graz, Basel, Dynamo Kyiv, Slovan Bratislava, Kairat Almaty, Qarabag and Shkendija all possible opponents. Last Friday, on the back of a quiet summer to date, he challenged the club's board to match his ambition. But he remains confident the team will be to his liking come the first leg of the £40million shootout at the end of the month. 'We'll be ready for the games,' he said. 'The players are working very hard. They are always tense games but we're in a good place and we'll take that game on when it comes. 'I'm feeling really good. The players are shaping up very well. There's real spirit and solidarity in the team. Whoever we get, it's going to be tough, but it will also be tough for them. And we'll accept whatever challenge comes.' Rodgers took a straight bat to questions over whether his team's solitary goal against St Mirren underlined the need to add more quality in forward areas. 'We got into a lot of good areas,' he said. 'We'll always take the game to the final third of the pitch, but we created a lot today. 'You have to give credit to the goalkeeper (St Mirren's Shamal George). He made some great saves. We were creative, dominated the game. 'To win the first game is always good and I'm absolutely pleased with the performance. 'St Mirren are such a hard team to break down. You have to be aware of the threat on the counter-attack, the physicality at set-pieces.' Asked if his side could have had three or four goals on another day, the Celtic manager said: 'I think everyone who was at the game or watched it on TV would say that. Sometimes you need a wee bit of good fortune as well. We didn't quite have that, but some of them hit the post and the bar.' Kieran Tierney's competitive return was cut short amid fears he had suffered another injury, but Rodgers revealed the defender was only suffering from cramp. 'He got a great reception and you see the qualities he has,' he said. 'He had a wee bit of cramp at the end. 'He hasn't played a lot of football. We need to build him and his fitness.' Manchester City defender Jahmai Simpson-Pusey was at the game, with a one-year loan deal now all but agreed. 'We're still waiting for clearance on that one,' said Rodgers. 'But he's up here ready for the move.' Saints boss Stephen Robinson felt his side gave an extremely good account of themselves. 'It was disappointing because we lost to a deflection,' he said. 'Our level of performance showed when Celtic were trying to waste time in the last five minutes of the game. Defensively, we were superb.'

'He definitely has it', so why did Hamilton say he was useless?
'He definitely has it', so why did Hamilton say he was useless?

BBC News

timean hour ago

  • BBC News

'He definitely has it', so why did Hamilton say he was useless?

Lewis Hamilton insisted he "still loves" Formula 1 after his most challenging weekend of his Ferrari career so far at the Hungarian Grand Saturday, Hamilton had said he was "just useless" after the seven-time champion qualified 12th on the grid, while his team-mate Charles Leclerc took Ferrari's first grand prix pole position of the Sunday, Hamilton finished in the same place, while Leclerc, after fighting with the race-winning McLarens for the first two-thirds of the race, faded to fourth place, his car apparently afflicted by a problem in the final said he felt "the same" as he had after qualifying. He said: "There's a lot going on in the background that is not… great, so…" But added: "I'm sure there are positives to take from the weekend and I'm sure there's learnings."As is often the case when Hamilton struggles, not only does his mood plumb the depths, but the F1 rumour mill spins into Hamilton over the hill, some wondered after qualifying? Would he even quit Ferrari at the end of the year, or perhaps even before the end of the season?That one, at least, Hamilton rejected, saying he would be back in the car at the Dutch Grand Prix at the end of August after F1's summer break."I'm looking forward to coming back," he said. "I'll be back, yeah."Anyone who knows Hamilton, and his determination, and refusal to give up, knows the answers to the other questions about his future, performance, in the wake of some upgrades on the Ferrari car at least gives him some room for optimism."Definitely some improvements that have been made on the upgrades," Hamilton said. "Naturally, it's a shame we're not as competitive as the guys at the front, but you've seen Charles has had a really strong run of the last two races."The car is definitely progressing, so we have to keep trying to extract more from it." What does his boss think? Team principal Frederic Vasseur injected some perspective into Hamilton's situation."For sure when you are seven times world champion, your team-mate is in pole position and you are out in Q2, it's a tough situation," Vasseur the race result, Vasseur pointed out that Ferrari had gambled on a one-stop strategy starting on the hard tyre on a track where overtaking is notoriously difficult, and it "didn't work.""I can understand the frustration from Lewis," he said, "but this is normal, and he will come back."Vasseur, who was instrumental in persuading Hamilton to leave Mercedes to join Ferrari for this season, pointed out that the results in Hungary made his driver's weekend look worse than it Hamilton had been 0.247 seconds slower than Leclerc when he was knocked out of qualifying after the second session. But Leclerc himself had found it hard to progress, and Hamilton had been just 0.155secs adrift of his team-mate in the first past two races have seen a stall in the positive momentum Hamilton had been building after a difficult start to his Ferrari Miami in early May, there has been little to choose between the two drivers in qualifying, and Hamilton out-qualified Leclerc in three of the four races before Belgium, a week before errors of different kinds in the qualifying sessions for the sprint and grand prix at Spa made Hamilton look uncompetitive when he was anything was a match for Leclerc on pace in Belgium, but an off followed by a spin caused by a combination of factors relating to a new braking material saw him out in the first session in sprint qualifying, and the same thing happened when he misjudged the exit of the 180mph+ swerves at Eau Rouge and went slightly outside track limits in qualifying for the grand with the problems in Belgium and Hungary, and the need to adapt to a new car of very different characteristics at the start of the season, Hamilton's average qualifying deficit to Leclerc is 0.146 seconds this not what Hamilton would expect of himself, but it should be viewed in the context of that Ferrari - and many others in F1 - regard Leclerc as the fastest driver over a single lap in the critics point to his struggles against George Russell in his final season at Mercedes last 40-year-old has found the ground-effect cars introduced into F1 in 2022 do not fit his late-braking style as well as the previous generation of cars. And it does remain a mystery that he has not been able to adapt as well as would have been expected, or apparently as well as other Vasseur rejected any idea that he might be worried about Hamilton's situation."He's demanding," Vasseur said, "but I think it's also why he's seven times world champion, that he's demanding with the team, with the car, with the engineers, with the mechanics, with myself also. But first of all he's very demanding with himself." What does his former boss think? Toto Wolff, Hamilton's former team boss at Mercedes, was asked about Hamilton's downbeat self-assessment."That is Lewis wearing his heart on the sleeve," he said. "It's what he thought very much when he was asked after the session. It was very raw."He was doubting himself, and we had it in the past when he felt that he underperformed his own expectations and your team-mate is on pole, and he's been that emotionally transparent since he was a young boy or young adult."As for Hamilton's general performances, Wolff said: "He's the GOAT, and he will always be the GOAT, and nobody's going to take that away. That's something he needs to always remember, that he's the greatest of all times."Lewis has unfinished business in Formula 1. In the same way that Mercedes underperformed over this latest set of regulations since 2022, we kind of never got happy with ground-effect cars. And in the same way, it bit him."Maybe it's linked to driving style. So he shouldn't go anywhere. Next year is brand new cars, completely different to drive, new power-units that need an intelligent way of managing the energy."Can Hamilton still win that elusive eighth title, Wolff was asked?"If he has a car underneath him that he has confidence in, that does what he wants, then yes," he replied."If he has a car that it's not giving him the feedback that he wants, and that was the Mercedes of the past few years, and that seems to be the Ferrari, and even worse, then not."But you ask me whether he has it, he definitely has it."

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