
Clarkson? Mitov? Your views on Dons difference maker
We asked for your views on who could be Aberdeen's hero in Saturday's Scottish Cup final against Celtic.Here's what some of you said:Alan: For me, there won't just be one hero if we win. It's down to the team as a whole. They need to work together and make Celtic work. Shayden Morris, Graeme Shinnie and Ante Palaversa will be instrumental in this but everyone in Aberdeen colours will have their part to play.Steve: I am hoping Leighton Clarkson shines bright on Saturday. I just hope he can show the form he did when he arrived on loan from Liverpool. When we signed him permanently for the following season, he just failed to show that he was an undoubtedly talented footballer that we were all raving about. We all know that he's got the talent, and potential to be a big influencer in big games. Well they don't get much bigger than on Saturday against an exceptional team, but no one, or team is infallible. Come On You Reds!Daniel: Dimitar Mitov. A string of sensational saves to keep it 0-0. Saves a penalty.Andy: Earlier in the season some Dons fans thought that Jimmy Thelin could walk on water. Sticking with that theme, I think he should play a 5-4-1 formation and pray for a miracle.Duncan: Clarkson with a pure filth free-kick.Bill: Anything better than a 5-1 defeat will be reasonable. Even as a Dons fan I think Celtic will simply blow us away. A 2-0 loss would be great.Chris: I think the in-form striker for Aberdeen is Kevin Nisbet, so he will attract attention from a very solid Celtic defence. This may leave space for someone else to nick a goal or two. As for who that might be it is hard to suggest and I'm not sure it really matters, the trick will be to get the goal/s. After that keeping the Celtic goal machine out, which is something we struggle to do.Malky: We need a whole different approach to this game. We cannot rely on a similar approach and system that has failed so, so many times against Celtic. If we are to be successful and lift the trophy, we need absolutely everybody to be on their A game, but the likes of Clarkson, who can unlock defences and pick that pass, can also score from set-pieces and long range strikes. We need him at the very top of his game.
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BBC News
6 minutes ago
- BBC News
What now for Scotland as Clarke enters final chapter?
Three hundred and sixty five long days ago, Steve Clarke's Scotland strode out at Hampden Park, their last auf Wiedersehen before they went off to give Germany, Switzerland and Hungary what for at Euro 2024. By the time they finished their farewell on the back of an uninspiring - and at times chaotic - 2-2 draw, those in the stands could probably tell what was about to unfold over the next few weeks. They had seen it all before at the previous Euros. They had bought the T-shirt and the sticker album. A year on, that feeling lingered in the Glasgow air again. Against a bang average Iceland, Clarke's Scotland were meek, weak and bleak. The snarling Scots who bloodied the noses of Spain were nowhere to be seen. No whiff of the streetwise bunch who suckered Croatia and Poland within days of each other last night at Hampden has left more questions than answers. Clarke may have hauled Scotland to two major finals, but there have been some real raw moments of alarm that have brought a dose of reality and gravity to it was the latest one, a sucker right between the eyes. "Don't get cocky boys, remember, you're Scotland, you don't qualify for World Cups. Down you go."Qualification for 2026 global showpiece does not start until September for Scotland, but this was meant to be the first step towards it. Instead, the Tartan Army are entitled to wonder where Clarke's team is going. Slicker only part of horror story It took until an hour after full-time on Friday for the Scotland head coach to emerge to give his view on what had just unfolded. As ever, Clarke remained level in his tone and mood. There was disappointment at a lacklustre start. There was sympathy for clearly confidence-stricken goalkeeper Cieran Slicker, who was plunged into the debut of his nightmares after Angus Gunn's early departure. There was a low-key hope that next time - Liechtenstein on Monday - will be fairness, it could not have been a whole lot worse. Scotland were unimaginative in front of goal and porous in defence against the world's 74th-best team. Slicker - Ipswich Town's back up who has yet to play a league game - will be cursing his sloppy kick out seconds after coming on that led to the opener. He will also no doubt be replaying goals two and three that evaded his to lay all Scotland's failings at the door of a 22-year-old making an unexpected debut would be grossly unfair. This was a Scotland team - containing two Serie A champions, a Coppa Italia final hero, and a Premier League winner among others - who could not conjure enough to overcome an Iceland team who lost 3-1 to Kosovo at home in it was a friendly, but an alarm is going off. Three months ago, the Scots were shellacked 3-0 at home by Greece, halting any sort of momentum built from three wins on the spin. But, in truth, Clarke's side have come up short more often than not in recent times, even if performances have sometimes merited more. Four wins from their last 21 games. Twelve defeats in that time, 22 goals scored and 42 against. Losses at home to Northern Ireland, Finland, Greece and now Iceland. It does not give off the feel of a Scotland team who can just get the job done. Of a team that is moving forward. "If you go back only a very short period of time, Steve Clarke could do no wrong," former Scotland striker Steven Thompson said on BBC Scotland."This is a defeat, at home, to a weaker nation than ourselves and questions will be asked. When you go into proper World Cup qualifying, these performances won't be tolerated." What now for Clarke? Thompson is right about that, but where are Scotland under Clarke?Undoubtedly, the former Kilmarnock and West Bromwich Albion manager has overseen the brightest spell for Scotland in terms of qualification since the 1990s. Two European Championships have been reached, after a hollow feeling was left after both finals, given how much of a whimper the Scots went out on each occasion. The novelty of simply being there had worn off as Germany's fifth goal hit the net in last June's torrid opening game in Munich.A World Cup still eludes Clarke, who has said there is a "75% chance" he will not renew his deal with the Scottish FA after next summer's finals. A quick scan of social media tells you some are clamouring for that to be a 0% chance. And now. But is that rational after a friendly defeat?Clear, logical thinking and a football fan after a bad defeat rarely go hand in hand, but these friendlies are not without meaning or consequence. Scotland now have a cluster of players good enough to compete in a qualifying group containing Denmark, Greece and Belarus. The problem is, would you stick your mortgage on them getting the job done?Scotland striker Lyndon Dykes and former forward James McFadden both spoke post-match about momentum and its importance. Lose in Liechtenstein and Clarke's side are going into their opener in Denmark on the back of three defeats."I think Steve Clarke will admit that it's not good enough," former Scotland defender Willie Miller said."I don't see him changing in any way his support for the players, but you've got to be honest with the fans, with everybody, that that's not acceptable."In reality, it is unlikely anything will happens in Liechtenstein that prevents Clarke from being the man to try to navigate Scotland through a qualifying. Although that opinion might be revised after another defeat. He should have enough credit in the bank, though, and there will be enough desire from him to be the man to get Scotland to a World Cup for the first time since by Clarke's own admission, we are likely entering his final chapter. Friendlies or not, how he handles the coming days - and how his team end this international window - could play a key part in defining his legacy as Scotland is all about momentum. Clarke and Scotland need to find it - and fast.


The Sun
10 minutes ago
- The Sun
Wolves release TEN players including Wrexham-linked former European champion and Champions League runner-up
WOLVES have announced TEN players will leave the club this summer. Skipper Nelson Semedo is among those to be offered a new deal at Molineux. 2 But Pablo Sarabia and Craig Dawson are heading out of the exit door. Sarabia, 33, joined the club from Paris Saint-Germain in January 2023. The Spaniard was a Champions League runner-up with PSG in 2020 and brought flair to Wolves on the flanks. He scored eight goals in 77 games, twice winning the club's Goal of the Season award. Sarabia confirmed last week he was to leave the Midlands after just over two years. He wrote on Instagram: "Two and a half seasons ago, I had the chance to become part of the Wolves family and experience a league as competitive as the @premierleague. "It's been an exciting challenge, and even though we went through tough moments, we reached our goals — thanks to the unity between the club and the fans. "Now it's time to start a new chapter, taking with me some amazing memories from a club that my family and I will never forget. " "Wishing you all the best for the future. Once a Wolf, always a Wolf. Thank you @wolves." Dawson has been linked with a move to ambitious Championship side Wrexham following their consecutive promotions. The ex- West Ham defender played 61 times in the gold of Wolves. Matheus Cunha gifts Wolves team-mates Joao Gomes and Andre a Rolex ahead of Man Utd transfer And reports suggest Wrexham have tabled a contract offer to the former Conference League champion. Wolves also announced eight players from their youth setup will be released. Stan Amos, Justin Hubner, Testimony Igbinoghene, Aaron Keto Diyawa, Lucas Kibrya, Filozofe Mabete, Josh Nyakudya and Matty Whittingham are all free to find new clubs. The club have also chosen not to take up the option in Carlos Forbs' loan deal, with the forward returning to Ajax. It comes after last season's top scorer Matheus Cunha moved to Manchester United for £62.5million. The Brazilian looks set to be joined in leaving by Rayan Ait-Nouri, who is a target for Manchester City.


Telegraph
25 minutes ago
- Telegraph
British No 1 Katie Boulter: ‘The epitome of tennis for me is Wimbledon'
There are, Katie Boulter reckons, two main paths to success in tennis – especially in women's tennis. You can, in the first instance, be a teenage prodigy, the kind of freak who blazes on to the scene like a comet, taking on players double your age and beating them, all while studying for your A-levels. But this road is fraught with danger. 'In some ways you want to be that child who's going to be the next big thing, a superstar from a young age, but there are caveats to it. Things that people don't see that can be pretty brutal,' Boulter says. 'I've seen it throughout a lot of people's careers. Some people are made to handle it and some people aren't. It's interesting to watch. I don't personally wish for it.' And then there's the other path. The slow, winding route to glory, away from the brightest glare of public and media attention. This way may take longer, but the destination's the same, and when you arrive, you tend to be better able to deal with being there. This is the road Boulter's taking. At 28, having toiled as a professional for more than a decade, she is now Britain's number one-ranked women's tennis player and intends to stay there. 'I'm not expecting to be an overnight success. I'm expecting to work for it,' she says. 'I like working hard. I like getting credit for the achievements I've made, but I also enjoy being… not exactly an underdog, but the quiet one.' She smiles. 'I like being that person.' It's 8am on a Monday in south-west London, a decent forehand's distance from the All England Club. We're in tennis country, at a vast, beautiful house tucked down a long drive, where Boulter will be photographed today. 'I must have driven this road a thousand times and never knew it was here,' she says, gazing at the place as she alights from an Uber. Boulter, who's in Nike athleisure with her trademark high ponytail, woke up at her home nearby only 20 minutes ago. She apologises immediately if she doesn't make any sense before she's had several coffees, but proceeds to be more lucid and honest about her sport than many manage in a career. She's only just overcome jetlag after flying home from the Miami Open. After all these years, it never gets any easier, even now she's in business class. The Boyfriend Exaggerated Cuff Green Stripe shirt, £130, Devon Jumper Green and White Stripe, £140 (on shoulders) both With Nothing Underneath, Suede Skirt, £749, Cotton cable Knit Cricket Vest, £229, Both Polo Ralph Lauren, Leather mary janes, £200, 'I never used to [be in business] when I was younger, but then I got injured and had to say to myself, 'You need to take care of yourself if you're going to do these miles.' In tennis you pay your own expenses – your coach, everything. So it's quite challenging for a lot of players. You don't really break even unless you're top 100. There's people trying to change that, but it's pretty tough. You're always trying to save in places, but not to the detriment of your health.' Boulter's rise certainly wasn't without incident. Born and brought up in Leicestershire but with stints in Florida and London, she showed great childhood promise that was interrupted by debilitating chronic fatigue in her late teens, while other injuries – including a spinal stress fracture in 2019 – mean she's hit her physical prime only in recent years. Now fit, she's soared up the rankings, rising to a career-high world number 23 at the end of last year, after winning her first WTA titles, and in the process overtaking Emma Raducanu to be Britain's top woman for the past two years. 'Tennis is a fascinating sport,' she says. 'You've got 17-year-olds playing against 35-year-olds, you've got people having their best years as teenagers and others having their best years in their 30s. Anything can happen, and for me it was going to be a matter of time before I got my ducks in a row. It's been nice seeing that come to fruition.' This year is proving an 'enlightening' one. She ignored a foot injury for too long, which ended up halting 2024's momentum when it sidelined her earlier in the year, but she returned to help Great Britain into the finals of the Billie Jean King Cup when she and her doubles partner Jodie Burrage beat the Netherlands this April, before breaking new ground by earning the first WTA Tour clay-court win of her career, at the Madrid Open. That's all before the grass-court season starts, including playing at The Queen's Club as it hosts professional women's tennis for the first time in more than 50 years, and of course Wimbledon. Grass is Boulter's strongest surface, and she says, 'The epitome of tennis for me is Wimbledon and the grass season and playing at home in front of my friends and family.' And, occasionally, even more esteemed guests: in 2023 the Princess of Wales surprised her by turning up to watch her on day two of Wimbledon. Boulter comes from a tennis family. Her mother, Sue, whom she 'idolises', was her first tennis coach, while her maternal grandparents, Brian and Jill Gartshore, were county champions who met on court. Her older brother, James, was also a promising junior, but gave it up as a teenager and now slogs it out as an agent to Hollywood stars. Their father, David, a businessman who used to work for BP, and Sue were 'the total opposite' of typical tennis tiger parents, encouraging Boulter to keep an all-round education and to focus on tennis only when she decided to. When Boulter was starting secondary school, her father's work took the family to Florida, where she was briefly homeschooled and met various other young tennis starlets, including her now best friend, Laura Robson. Her parents' marriage ended, after which the 13-year-old Boulter and her mother moved to London while her father stayed in Florida. Boulter hasn't seen him since, she says; her grandfather is 'probably the biggest male influence I had growing up'. On court, Maria Sharapova, Serena Williams, Roger Federer and 'some people outside of tennis, like Jessica Ennis' were her idols. She played Williams and Federer in the same few days at a tournament once. 'It was quite the week…' she says, shaking her head. Chronic fatigue, which struck in her late teens, now 'feels like a long time ago, but I didn't feel like I could train or get the work done to be a tennis player'. She changed her lifestyle and diet, and the cure came ultimately from 'the support from my family, plus the medical team at the National Tennis Centre, which I know I'm very lucky to have [compared] to a lot of kids in the same situation,' she says. 'I think [the fatigue] showed me what I wanted, it led me to this path. I wouldn't change it, because I don't know if I'd be here right now without that.' The coffee has arrived. 'Praise the Lord,' Boulter says. As, in fact, has her agent, Dino Marcan, a tall, friendly Croatian. Boulter's support team has steadied in recent years, but it has also swollen by one, with the addition of her fiancé, Alex de Minaur, the Australian currently ranked number seven in the men's game. The pair have been an off-court couple since 2020 and engaged since December, and they frequently play doubles together – teasing each other in post-match interviews and on social media. They've been variously compared to 'the new Andre Agassi and Steffi Graf', and 'the real life Tashi and Art from Challengers '. (People who say the latter possibly haven't seen that film in full.) 'We're the most lax people out there, we're always just having fun,' Boulter says. 'We played in the mixed doubles at Wimbledon a few years ago, and I think it was the most fun I've had in my life. I just love every second on the tennis court with him. He just knows how to support me.' I'd wondered if she might be less than keen to be asked about de Minaur, but she beams whenever he comes up. 'My career's been very up and down, but I've been through a lot and I feel like I can help him. He can be quite narrow-minded and he focuses on tennis, tennis, tennis and can lose perspective sometimes with just being human and remembering to enjoy it. I try to have a positive impact on that, and he brings me so much great advice. He's been the stable part of my life, and it's so important to have that.' I cannot help but notice she's wearing a diamond ring the size of Uluru. She laughs: 'Alex and my mum did very well.' Boulter is a 'Rare Jewels ambassador' for Pragnell, and always wears beautiful pieces on court, but the ring doesn't go with her. 'I'm just a tad paranoid about losing it. My team are always keeping an eye on it for me.' No date or location is set for the big day – Boulter's family are in Leicestershire, de Minaur's is split between Australia and Spain. 'I've not been a massive dreamer about my wedding – as long as my family are there, I'll be happy. [But] I did sort of dream about a destination wedding, having a place you can go back to that's your place. So it's possible it'll be in the middle of nowhere.' Katie wears: Denim dress, £1,300, denim mules, £600, and cotton sun bed, £2,500, all Celine Having de Minaur around gives Boulter an insight into men's tennis, which may be just as fiercely competitive as the women's game, but the off-court experience is different. It has always struck me, I say, that women in tennis are held to a far higher standard, especially when it comes to receiving criticism for doing anything other than training and winning. 'Yeah, possibly,' Boulter says, weighing this up. 'You do see a lot of [criticism] on social media, even I get a lot of that. You kind of get ridiculed for spending one second off the tennis court, which wouldn't be healthy for anyone in any other job. People expect you to be practising and playing at all times. But half of tennis is recovery, rehab, switching off – all these things people do not see. 'People judge but they don't see the full story. That's where [players] take it pretty hard, when you've got people telling you how to live your life. They don't see that we're human, and don't see the less glamorous side of things, they don't see me late at night in the treatment room having done 10 hours of work that day, they see one snippet of my time on court that day.' Boulter spoke last year about how common threats and stalking are in the women's game; how she and de Minaur have been followed around west London in a car, and a man once messaged her at the Nottingham Open to say, 'I'm outside. I'm going to hurt you if you come outside.' He was caught: he really was there, waiting. Katie wears: Cotton dress, £1,710, and leather racquet pouch, £1,460, both Louis Vuitton. Gold and diamond ring, £3,740, Pragnell 'It's apparent in tennis, there's a lot that goes on,' Boulter says today. Marcan nods. 'Some of it you don't even see, it comes to my email and I don't even tell you.' What sort of thing? 'Threats. I've had people tell me they're going to kill me even after one of my clients has won a tournament. Some of them are gamblers, some of them are stalkers, it's a mix of people,' Marcan says. 'And some of them are just bored, hiding behind a keyboard. There's a few of those out there too,' Boulter adds. Has she ever been asked to throw a game? 'They ask you everything. Obviously you report it straight away to the authorities. Ultimately you get abused. And I get double now, because every time Alex loses, they blame me…' She and de Minaur do, at least, make sure to stop talking about tennis as much as they can. 'That side of things is important, you have to know when to draw the line and take a moment for yourself. But when we're home we could be doing anything, him dragging me to the golf course, going on a date night in town, hanging out with my girlfriends, seeing my family.' Where would they go on a date night? 'We've changed, it could be going to a restaurant we've seen on Instagram or TikTok, or we just go into the arcades, or to Putt Putt [a crazy golf and karaoke place], the dodgems. Something fun but competitive.' She knows she's switched off, she says, when she's not in tennis clothes. 'A lot of the time I'm in my Nikes, I love that and I've been with them pretty much my whole career, but getting out of my training kit is such a nice switch-off for me, knowing I'm in my casuals that day.' Fashion is Boulter's other great passion, and may well end up being the primary one in the long term. 'I love it. It's something I want to get into when I finish tennis. I want to run my own business, designing my own stuff. That'd be pretty cool,' she says. Katie wears: Piqué jacket, £2,300, poplin shirt, £1,150, matching skirt, £1,290, metal belt, £1,100, calfskin belt, £510, suede shoes, £710, and silk socks, £290, all Miu Miu 'I love finding vintage pieces. I've got one of the oldest Loro Piana dresses, very traditional, very pleated. I resonate a lot with tradition, in tennis as well, with Wimbledon being my favourite. I find little boutiques around the world thanks to tennis, and love the feeling of finding something unique.' For now, though, the athleisure years continue as tennis reigns. A lot of the players Boulter met and played with or against when she was a teenager have long since dropped out. They burnt too bright, played too hard, or simply fell through the cracks. But Boulter, whose motto is 'perseverance is everything', is still on her steady, winding ascent. She has won titles, earned buckets of prize money, secured sponsorship deals and become a fan favourite, but a deep run in a Grand Slam tournament still eludes her. Now, with Queen's and Wimbledon in the offing, she plans to kick on again. 'The stars align for some people, they don't for others. But look at someone like [US player] Madison Keys, who won her first Grand Slam this year. She's 30, and could easily have quit a couple of years ago. But she persevered.' Boulter smiles. 'It's something I think about a lot. That's why it's my motto.'