
Watch: Wayne Rooney hits back at NFL legend Tom Brady
You obviously have the famous example of Ryan Reynolds and Rob McElhenney owning Wrexham. McElhenney came up with the idea to buy the Welsh side after watching the Netflix docuseries 'Sunderland 'til I die' and wanting to replicate a series like that with his own club.
A few years after the launch of the 'Welcome to Wrexham' docuseries, Wrexham are one of the fastest growing clubs in the UK with a new International reach.
This has led to more celebrities getting involved in ownership groups in English football. You have Michael B. Jordan at Bournemouth, Will Ferrell at Leeds United and also NFL great Tom Brady at Birmingham City. NFL legend Tom Brady in the stand before the Sky Bet Championship match between Birmingham City and Leeds United at St Andrews, Birmingham on Saturday 12th August 2023. Pic: Gustavo Pantano/MI News/NurPhoto via Getty Images
Brady got involved with The Blues back in August 2023, buying a 5% ownership stake in the club as part of the aptly named Shelby Companies Ltd (Peaky Blinders reference for those unfamiliar). It was in that season that Brady and co began filming a docuseries which has just been released on Amazon Prime this summer.
'Brady & The Blues' documents the NFL great's first year in Birmingham and one of the biggest talking points coming out of it was Brady's comments about then manager Wayne Rooney. Wayne Rooney during his time at Birmingham City. Pic:Rooney was in the midst of a tough season at Birmingham City which ultimately saw them get relegated from the Championship. In the doc, during the November of that season, Brady is seen saying that he was 'a little worried about our head coach's work ethic.' Rooney would be sacked that January.
Speaking on his new podcast The Wayne Rooney Show, the Manchester United great spoke about his experiences with Brady, or lack thereof.
'I think Tom came in once, which was the day before a game where the days are a little bit lighter anyway, and I don't think he really understood football that well. But what he does understand is – he's a hard worker – we know that.'
Rooney then went on to explain that perhaps Brady's lack of experience in football led to the portrayal we saw in the doc.
'Football is not NFL – NFL works for three months a year. Players do need rest as well, so I think he's very unfair, the way he's come out and portrayed that.' Wayne Rooney as Birmingham City manager. Pic: MI News/NurPhoto via Getty Images
Wayne Rooney has been out of football management since leaving Plymouth Argyle in December 2024 when he left with the south coast side at the bottom of the Championship.
Birmingham spent just one season down at League One, getting promoted last season with a record points total. Their return to the Championship got off to a solid start last week as they drew 1-1 with Ipswich Town, who are one of the favourites to get promoted.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Irish Sun
2 hours ago
- The Irish Sun
Slew of daft new slang words including skibidi & tradwife added to Cambridge Dictionary – how many do you know?
Do you know what a 'mouse jiggler' is? WORD UP Slew of daft new slang words including skibidi & tradwife added to Cambridge Dictionary – how many do you know? SOCIAL media slang words skibidi, tradwife and delulu have been added to the Cambridge Dictionary. They are among thousands of new expressions, which also include the working from home term 'mouse jiggler' and toxic 'forever chemicals'. Skibidi has different meanings, such as 'cool' or 'bad', and can also be used with no real meaning, for example in: 'What the skibidi are you doing?' The term was coined by the creator of a viral animated video series called Skibidi Toilet on YouTube, Cambridge Dictionary said. Tradwife — short for traditional wife — is a married woman who cooks and cleans and stays at home to look after her children. And delulu means somebody who chooses to believe things which are not true — as in delusional. Colin McIntosh, of Cambridge Dictionary, said: 'Internet culture is changing the English language and the effect is fascinating to observe and capture in the dictionary. 'We only add words where we think they'll have staying power.' The dictionary uses a database of more than two billion words in written and spoken English to observe how new words are used by different people, how often and in which context. Remote working helped 'mouse jiggler' — a device or piece of software used to make it seem as though a shirker is working — gain its place in the dictionary. And 'forever chemicals' are man-made substances which do not naturally break down and pollute the environment or the body. A made-up word from a 22-year-old 'Simpsons' episode finally makes it into the dictionary


Irish Examiner
4 hours ago
- Irish Examiner
Fifa consider holding Club World Cup every two years from 2029 – and expanding it to 48 teams
Fifa will consider holding the Club World Cup every two years from 2029 in a move that would put more pressure on the international calendar and trigger another backlash from the Premier League and Uefa. The next Club World Cup is due to take place in four years' time, following the first expanded 32-team tournament held in the US this summer, but the world governing body is under pressure from leading clubs to make it a biennial event. Real Madrid are understood to have raised the issue of moving to a two-year cycle during talks with Fifa in Miami in June, a proposal that has gained support from other clubs who failed to qualify for this year's tournament, including Barcelona, Manchester United, Liverpool and Napoli. Chelsea received £85m in prize money for winning the competition and other big European clubs want the opportunity to take advantage of Fifa's huge revenue streams, which are being funded largely by Saudi Arabia's Surj Sports Investments. Liverpool in particular were unfortunate not to take part this year, as they met one of the qualifying criteria by being among the top eight ranked clubs in Europe, but missed out as Fifa opted to admit a maximum of two sides from a country. Chelsea and Manchester City took the English slots as recent Champions League winners. There is an exception to the limit if more than two clubs from a country win their continental competition during the qualifying period, as was the case with Brazil this year. Fifa sources said that while there is no serious consideration being given to staging the Club World Cup in 2027, the situation is likely to change after 2029, with the prospect of another tournament being held in 2031 to be explored. Fifa's hands are tied in the short-term as the international match calendar is fixed until 2030, with only the 2029 Club World Cup in the schedule, as part of a memorandum of understanding signed between Fifa and the European Clubs Association two years ago. With Fifa already facing legal action from World Leagues, an international lobby group that includes the Premier League, there is no appetite to inflame it further by ripping up the current schedule. World Leagues has filed a legal complaint to the European Commission with support from the global players' union Fifpro, accusing Fifa of 'abuse of dominance' for allegedly failing to consult them over the scheduling of the Club World Cup. Staging the new competition every two years would increase tensions still further, but there is an acknowledgement on both sides that the entire global calendar after 2030 is open for negotiation. As part of a quid pro quo for moving into the club game, sources have indicated that Fifa may be willing to remove the June international break to ease player workloads and create space for events such as the Club World Cup, although that would be opposed by Uefa, which uses summer dates to stage the finals of its Nations League competition. In a pre-season address last week the Premier League chief executive, Richard Masters, outlined his concerns with expanding the Club World Cup, although the biggest top-flight clubs appear to disagree. 'Fifa was put on earth really to regulate the global game and to run international football, and the Club World Cup is a move into club football,' Masters said. 'The leagues and the players have not been consulted at all on the timing and scheduling of the competition, and I think whatever iteration of it may come next, we do need to be consulted on that. 'Obviously, it does have an impact on the scheduling of the Premier League season, that much is clear. We're asking for a seat at the table, a proper discussion for the leagues.' Fifa is the process of reviewing the qualifying criteria for the 2029 Club World Cup and may lift the cap of two clubs per country, and as previously reported by the Guardian it is consulting on whether to increase the number of teams involved from 32 to 48. The men's World Cup next year and the 2031 Women's World Cup will involve 48 teams for the first time, so expanding the Club World Cup would be consistent with Fifa's tournament model. Having awarded hosting rights to this year's competition to the US without inviting tenders, Fifa is planning to run formal bidding process for future tournaments. Qatar, Spain and Morocco have all expressed interest in staging the 2029 Club World Cup, with details of the tender process expected later this year. The Guardian

The Journal
4 hours ago
- The Journal
Arsenal capitalise on goalkeeping error to beat Man United
The 42 MANCHESTER UNITED'S expensively assembled new forward line drew a blank as Arsenal began their quest for the Premier League title by grinding out a 1-0 win at Old Trafford on Sunday. Riccardo Calafiori scored the only goal after the Italian defender pounced on a huge mistake by United's stand-in goalkeeper Altay Bayindir. United have splashed out £200 million (€232 million) on new forwards to remedy a lack of punch in the final third. Despite promising debuts, Matheus Cunha and Bryan Mbeumo failed to find the net, while substitute Benjamin Sesko could not make Arsenal pay for opting against pursuing their interest in the Slovenian. After finishing second for the past three seasons, the pressure is on Arsenal boss Mikel Arteta to deliver the club's first league title in 2003/04. The Spaniard was left to depend on his reliable defence and goalkeeper David Raya to secure a huge three points, as the visitors never got going as an attacking force. Only four other teams scored fewer than United's 44 goals in 38 Premier League games last season as the English giants endured their worst campaign for 51 years, finishing 15th in the table. The new arrivals have at least lifted the mood around Old Trafford, and the majority of the 75,000 fans in attendance could at least leave encouraged by the performance of Ruben Amorim's men. Cunha and Mbeumo unsettled Arsenal's normally unflappable centre-back pairing of Gabriel Magalhaes and William Saliba early on. Advertisement However, United's good work was undone by a glaring error from Bayindir, who was deputising for the injured Andre Onana. The Turkish international meekly flapped at an inswinging Declan Rice corner on 13 minutes, allowing Calafiori the simplest of tasks to head into an unguarded net. Patrick Dorgu came closest to a United reply before half-time with a powerful effort from distance that came back off the post. Mbeumo and Cunha saw tame efforts easily saved by Raya, while the Spaniard did brilliantly to divert another Cunha shot across the face of the goal. Arsenal had held interest in Sesko for well over a year before pursuing a move for Viktor Gyokeres as the solution to their need for a number nine. The Swede had a quiet Premier League debut and was replaced before the hour mark by Kai Havertz. Sesko made his entrance moments later to a hero's welcome after rejecting the advances of Newcastle for the lure of the 20-time English champions. United continued to enjoy the better of the play without finding the finish as Mbeumo saw a powerful header expertly clawed out by Raya. But Arsenal held firm to keep pace with title rivals Liverpool and Manchester City, who also won on the opening weekend of the campaign. – © AFP 2025 Written by AFP and originally published on The 42 whose award-winning team produces original content that you won't find anywhere else: on GAA, League of Ireland, women's sport and boxing, as well as our game-changing rugby coverage, all with an Irish eye. Subscribe here .