Coach Vick and Coach DeSean hold press conference ahead of HBCU matchup
Coach Vick and Coach DeSean hold press conference ahead of HBCU matchup originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

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Nicolas Jackson 'on verge' of leaving Chelsea as fresh exit route emerges after Bayern drop interest
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Sydney Lohmann wants to be known for more in England than just the viral Jill Scott rant
Sydney Lohmann was in a rut. Or what the German midfielder refers to as 'a circle'. The circle was, for what it's worth, pretty good: four Frauen-Bundesliga titles in five years with Bayern Munich, the 2024 DFB-Supercup, and the 2025 DFB-Pokal for Bayern's first domestic double. Lohmann was an integral cog in an ever-whirring German feat of engineering that saw Bayern stride into a record-breaking 44 matches unbeaten between December 2021 and October 2024. 'But there was just this feeling that it was always the same,' says the 25-year-old, who signed for Manchester City from Bayern in July, marking her first move outside her home country. 'But there was something about doing something new and seeing how you respond to that as a person. That's exciting. And if I'd never try it, then I'd never know.' Lohmann is talking to The Athletic inside the City Football Academy during her new club's multi-hour Women's Super League (WSL) media day. For all the talk of wanting to escape a circle, there is an irony at Lohmann being passed around from broadcast table to makeshift TikTok studio and being asked what song encapsulates her career — 'I couldn't answer that one,' she says — to, finally, The Athletic. Lohmann smiles widely. 'Training this morning was harder,' she says. This is why Lohmann is here, why she waved goodbye to the comfort zone of her girlhood club, of her parents being a 45-minute drive down the road, her sister in Vienna, of a life she could predict. She has moved to Manchester City for sporting reasons: the pursuit of silverware with a club that has not won a WSL title since 2016, developing her ability to not simply influence a match from midfield but negotiate its very outcome. But there is also her personal development: to challenge her ability to integrate, to expand her understanding of cultures, to go from Germany, 'a bread country', to a land of, according to Lohmann, 'so many coffee shops and good pastries'. (Here, Lohmann is asked whether she has ventured to a Greggs. Her eyebrows furrow in confusion.) 'The last time I was the new kid was probably when I went from boys football to Bayern nine years ago,' Lohmann says. 'In my first day at City, I was quite shy. But I thought, 'Sydney, you can speak a little more'. Then I found I'm quite good at small talk, being open to others. It's not that bad.' Lohmann is also equipped with an efficient ice-breaker. She was the subject of former City and England striker Jill Scott's iconic Euro 2022 final expletive-laden upbraiding. For those unfamiliar with the moment, Scott hurled five words at Lohmann after her late tackle. Two of them began with the letter F, and a third rhymed with stick. 'Bunny (Khadija Shaw) was laughing in the dressing room about it,' says Lohmann. 'I never knew it was such a big thing! It's actually crazy. And I'm like… I just got abuse from her!' Lohmann breaks into a laugh. She insists the relationship between the two players is more than amicable. Scott has since canonised the phrase (FOYFP) in a rib tattoo; Lohmann received a welcome video from Scott upon her signing for City. In any case, Lohmann acknowledges that not being known in England only for Jill Scott's rant could be nice. 'I hope I can add to that. If in the end I'm (known for) both, that's fine for me. I'm part of English football history,' she says, a smile growing. 'No, obviously, I want them to know me as a player. But, hey, I mean, it's good they know me from that. They can watch me when I play now.' The opportunities to do so will be plenty, particularly with the departure of Netherlands international Jill Roord to FC Twente. But Lohmann exudes humility as she runs through her plans for the season: train hard, adapt to the shift in intensity, be impacted by her new coaches and team-mates. 'If results and game time come from that, then I'm happy,' she says. Lohmann is one of many exciting new faces learning to navigate the Etihad campus this summer, not least new manager Andree Jeglertz, who Lohmann describes as a man of detail, tactically and personally. Alongside them are highly rated Canadian defender Jade Rose and Switzerland winger Iman Beney. The slight flex of depth is at odds with the final months of City's 2024-25 season. A season that began on a 10-match unbeaten run tumbled into a cruel carousel of injuries: Lauren Hemp, Alex Greenwood, Vivianne Miedema, Shaw, Mary Fowler, Risa Shimizu. When this year's 30-player Ballon d'Or Feminin nominations were released earlier this month, no City player graced the list. It was a small nod to the struggles. Lohmann's German compatriot Rebecca Knaak was signed in January from FC Rosengaard to fill the gap left by Greenwood. Serendipity has been borne from the desperation, of course. It was Knaak whom Lohmann quizzed on City's qualities as a potential home. 'I didn't even know her for that long when I got her number,' Lohmann laughs. 'She knew I existed and I knew she existed because she played for Freiburg. We never spoke to each other. But I voice messaged asking about the club, how the team was, the facilities, the city. Because it's not just about the club, but what's happening around the city, too. 'And it was funny because she was so excited herself. I was sending her a voice note back, like, 'Oh my God, that sounds so cool. I just want to come right now.' She was very positive about everything.' It's only been roughly a week since Lohmann touched down in Manchester following the summer's European Championship in Switzerland, where Germany succumbed to a last-gasp extra-time winner by Spain's Aitana Bonmati. It means Lohmann's exploration of her new city has consisted primarily of flat hunting in Manchester, visiting home stores and the training ground. This frontier will doubtlessly be expanded. In her first interview with her new club, Lohmann stated her favourite book was Yuval Noah Harari's acclaimed Homo Deus: A Brief History of Tomorrow — a book that envisions humans transcending to demi-gods and contemplating the intersection of evolution and devolution. 'It was the first book that came to my mind!' she says, almost apologetically, insisting she's more enthralled by the limits of human capacity and those people who can bend them. 'That's maybe a weird thing about me,' Lohmann says, who is currently reading Raynor Winn's The Salt Path. 'I read a lot of books about people hiking or biking through a whole continent. I'd like to do something like that, but because of football, I can't. So I read the books.' One day, then, maybe. For now, Lohmann is embarking on her Manchester journey. 'The day before I flew here, I said goodbye again to my old team, to the girls, and I was sad,' she says. 'We have such a good bond, good team spirit. It's hard to say goodbye. 'But that doesn't mean you cannot be excited, that it's not something good and new that awaits you.' This article originally appeared in The Athletic. Manchester City, England, Germany, Soccer, International Football, Women's Soccer 2025 The Athletic Media Company


New York Times
an hour ago
- New York Times
Sydney Lohmann wants to be known for more in England than just the viral Jill Scott rant
Sydney Lohmann was in a rut. Or what the German midfielder refers to as 'a circle'. The circle was, for what it's worth, pretty good: four Frauen-Bundesliga titles in five years with Bayern Munich, the 2024 DFB-Supercup, and the 2025 DFB-Pokal for Bayern's first domestic double. Lohmann was an integral cog in an ever-whirring German feat of engineering that saw Bayern stride into a record-breaking 44 matches unbeaten between December 2021 and October 2024. Advertisement 'But there was just this feeling that it was always the same,' says the 25-year-old, who signed for Manchester City from Bayern in July, marking her first move outside her home country. 'But there was something about doing something new and seeing how you respond to that as a person. That's exciting. And if I'd never try it, then I'd never know.' Lohmann is talking to The Athletic inside the City Football Academy during her new club's multi-hour Women's Super League (WSL) media day. For all the talk of wanting to escape a circle, there is an irony at Lohmann being passed around from broadcast table to makeshift TikTok studio and being asked what song encapsulates her career — 'I couldn't answer that one,' she says — to, finally, The Athletic. Lohmann smiles widely. 'Training this morning was harder,' she says. This is why Lohmann is here, why she waved goodbye to the comfort zone of her girlhood club, of her parents being a 45-minute drive down the road, her sister in Vienna, of a life she could predict. She has moved to Manchester City for sporting reasons: the pursuit of silverware with a club that has not won a WSL title since 2016, developing her ability to not simply influence a match from midfield but negotiate its very outcome. But there is also her personal development: to challenge her ability to integrate, to expand her understanding of cultures, to go from Germany, 'a bread country', to a land of, according to Lohmann, 'so many coffee shops and good pastries'. (Here, Lohmann is asked whether she has ventured to a Greggs. Her eyebrows furrow in confusion.) 'The last time I was the new kid was probably when I went from boys football to Bayern nine years ago,' Lohmann says. 'In my first day at City, I was quite shy. But I thought, 'Sydney, you can speak a little more'. Then I found I'm quite good at small talk, being open to others. It's not that bad.' Advertisement Lohmann is also equipped with an efficient ice-breaker. She was the subject of former City and England striker Jill Scott's iconic Euro 2022 final expletive-laden upbraiding. For those unfamiliar with the moment, Scott hurled five words at Lohmann after her late tackle. Two of them began with the letter F, and a third rhymed with stick. 'Bunny (Khadija Shaw) was laughing in the dressing room about it,' says Lohmann. 'I never knew it was such a big thing! It's actually crazy. And I'm like… I just got abuse from her!' Lohmann breaks into a laugh. She insists the relationship between the two players is more than amicable. Scott has since canonised the phrase (FOYFP) in a rib tattoo; Lohmann received a welcome video from Scott upon her signing for City. In any case, Lohmann acknowledges that not being known in England only for Jill Scott's rant could be nice. 'I hope I can add to that. If in the end I'm (known for) both, that's fine for me. I'm part of English football history,' she says, a smile growing. 'No, obviously, I want them to know me as a player. But, hey, I mean, it's good they know me from that. They can watch me when I play now.' The opportunities to do so will be plenty, particularly with the departure of Netherlands international Jill Roord to FC Twente. But Lohmann exudes humility as she runs through her plans for the season: train hard, adapt to the shift in intensity, be impacted by her new coaches and team-mates. 'If results and game time come from that, then I'm happy,' she says. Lohmann is one of many exciting new faces learning to navigate the Etihad campus this summer, not least new manager Andree Jeglertz, who Lohmann describes as a man of detail, tactically and personally. Alongside them are highly rated Canadian defender Jade Rose and Switzerland winger Iman Beney. The slight flex of depth is at odds with the final months of City's 2024-25 season. A season that began on a 10-match unbeaten run tumbled into a cruel carousel of injuries: Lauren Hemp, Alex Greenwood, Vivianne Miedema, Shaw, Mary Fowler, Risa Shimizu. Advertisement When this year's 30-player Ballon d'Or Feminin nominations were released earlier this month, no City player graced the list. It was a small nod to the struggles. Lohmann's German compatriot Rebecca Knaak was signed in January from FC Rosengaard to fill the gap left by Greenwood. Serendipity has been borne from the desperation, of course. It was Knaak whom Lohmann quizzed on City's qualities as a potential home. 'I didn't even know her for that long when I got her number,' Lohmann laughs. 'She knew I existed and I knew she existed because she played for Freiburg. We never spoke to each other. But I voice messaged asking about the club, how the team was, the facilities, the city. Because it's not just about the club, but what's happening around the city, too. 'And it was funny because she was so excited herself. I was sending her a voice note back, like, 'Oh my God, that sounds so cool. I just want to come right now.' She was very positive about everything.' It's only been roughly a week since Lohmann touched down in Manchester following the summer's European Championship in Switzerland, where Germany succumbed to a last-gasp extra-time winner by Spain's Aitana Bonmati. It means Lohmann's exploration of her new city has consisted primarily of flat hunting in Manchester, visiting home stores and the training ground. This frontier will doubtlessly be expanded. In her first interview with her new club, Lohmann stated her favourite book was Yuval Noah Harari's acclaimed Homo Deus: A Brief History of Tomorrow — a book that envisions humans transcending to demi-gods and contemplating the intersection of evolution and devolution. 'It was the first book that came to my mind!' she says, almost apologetically, insisting she's more enthralled by the limits of human capacity and those people who can bend them. Advertisement 'That's maybe a weird thing about me,' Lohmann says, who is currently reading Raynor Winn's The Salt Path. 'I read a lot of books about people hiking or biking through a whole continent. I'd like to do something like that, but because of football, I can't. So I read the books.' One day, then, maybe. For now, Lohmann is embarking on her Manchester journey. 'The day before I flew here, I said goodbye again to my old team, to the girls, and I was sad,' she says. 'We have such a good bond, good team spirit. It's hard to say goodbye. 'But that doesn't mean you cannot be excited, that it's not something good and new that awaits you.' Spot the pattern. Connect the terms Find the hidden link between sports terms Play today's puzzle