
‘Isak is exactly the same person': AIK coaches on forward's journey to top
Inside AIK Stockholm's academy building, Wennberg gives a tour of the uncompromising facility that forged one of the world's best strikers. Isak will be Newcastle's best hope of breaking a 56-year trophy drought when they face Liverpool in the Carabao Cup final on Sunday. There is nobody quite like him: nobody who blends poise with unpredictability, rigour with boundless imagination, cool temperament with flashes of light. Talents from all walks of life have a home here, but this is no identikit production line.
'It's rough, it's dirty, but it's everything and it's never not secure,' Wennberg says, between clasping hands with a succession of teenagers wielding training kit. By now he is deep underground in this Tardis of a bunker, its squat brick exterior giving no clues to the depths beneath. 'And it's hardcore. We know what this environment has fostered. Every day 150 players come through here. It's never, ever, fancy but there's a lot of love here. If we do one thing extra here in Stockholm, in this club, it's all about handcrafting.'
It is a process Isak underwent from the age of six, when he entered AIK's system. Within a decade he would be shining for the first team, given his wings by the influential coach Andreas Alm and tearing Allsvenskan defences apart in his only full season with the senior side. Emblazoned on the building's internal walls are the images of players who came through this education to make top-flight debuts for AIK. The Brighton midfielder Yasin Ayari is another whose progress is feted. Little comes easily in northern Stockholm, whose hardscrabble neighbourhoods form a diverse collage of economic and personal backgrounds.
'We are a picture of this city: mixed, blended, different,' says the long-serving Wennberg, the technical director. 'Some of our players may not have the best conditions at home so here it is a free space. This is a place for dreams to come true, an environment for those who have nothing but could become everything.'
In the gym a mural of famous academy graduates has a vacant space at its centre, inviting anyone pounding the treadmills to wonder if they could be next. There could be no better role model than Isak, even if most journeys should not be expected to go quite as quickly. During a morning inside this rabbit warren, which houses gas masks and other supplies from its previous life as a shelter, a rich cast of his former coaches, colleagues and acquaintances pass by. Everyone has their own anecdote or, in some cases, torrents of them.
It is the day after Isak, scoring twice, helped Newcastle beat Nottingham Forest 4-3 and there is satisfaction that he helped an AIK staff member fulfil their ambition. The club's supporter liaison officer had been holidaying nearby and was desperate to watch Isak at St James' Park. A text message from Wennberg, and, within 10 minutes, Isak had delivered the goods.
'He never forgets,' Wennberg says. 'He's humble. At the end of his under-17 year he had to fill in an evaluation and made a point of thanking the kit managers. He always understood that people worked around him to support him.'
In an office beyond the gym, Alexander Snäcke is sitting in front of a laptop. Snäcke was a highly rated teammate of Isak throughout the age groups before injury forced early retirement. He is a coach at AIK. 'There's the calm, humble personality but Isak is a joker and so are you,' Wennberg says to Snäcke, before the pair journey down memory lane. They cannot resist going back over the national under‑17 championship when, coached by Wennberg, AIK carried all before them.
'I can smell those training sessions, see moments from those games, like it was yesterday,' Wennberg says. 'A golden team. It was a squad of 20 players and they were like 20 coaches, all the ideas they had.' They break off to reminisce, in Swedish, about a thudding tackle Snäcke made in one of the ties. 'I was more nervous for the semi-final against Elfsborg than for the final,' Snäcke says. 'They were really good and we were a bit younger than them, but Alex assisted two goals. He just did stuff that changed the game.'
There was a moment, Elias Mineirji recalls, when it dawned that AIK had handcrafted a 16-year-old talent who would mix it with the elite. 'It was one of his first training sessions with the senior team,' he says. 'Winter, artificial grass, we were watching in the stands. He took the ball in his own half, and when he sets off at high speed nobody can catch him. It was 60 yards, down the right, and we were thinking he would run, run, run then pass. But then, outside the penalty area from an angle, he shot and it flew straight past the keeper. Everyone just applauded. We sat and looked at each other: 'He did it in the first team? At his age? Wow, he can do it against anyone.''
Mineirji, a former AIK player, was among those who founded the modern incarnation of its academy in 2008. Isak was in the system and Mineirji, who headed up the operation, coached him between the ages of 12 and 16. Everybody always knew they had a prodigious runner, dribbler, finisher and thinker on their hands; it was a matter of putting it all together.
They sensed a click when Isak was 14. He had fallen into the trap of Wennberg's present-day 11-year-olds, taking things a little too easily, and there were more than a few doubts. A coaches' report from the summer of 2013, assessing the merits of a gifted squad that also included the Atalanta defender Isak Hien, lays those bare. 'Squad player, but unsure if future player,' reads the note next to Isak's name. The team were serial winners of the Stockholm championship but he was stung when AIK considered not picking him for a national summer tournament. 'The penny dropped,' Mineirji says. Isak's output rocketed: barely anyone in the country could touch him from that moment.
The tales of uncertainty and hardship are told to highlight that, even in Isak's extraordinary case, there is no linear path. 'He's had to earn every minute of it,' Wennberg says of the rise that followed. 'Not every game was 100%, but his will was always there. We had other players in the same age group that also stood out, he was not the best in everything. He was not a gift from heaven.'
That is echoed by Johnny Gustafsson, another of Isak's coaches at under-16 and under‑17 levels, who sits upstairs with Wennberg in the staff meeting room. 'A lot of people, maybe agents and individual coaches, will say: 'We knew he was going to be a top player, I saw him when he was 10 or 12,'' he says. 'But that's not true. We who were there, actually working at this club, can see.'
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They knew that, if nothing else, the group that became would-be coaches shared an impudent dedication. 'There was a time when, sitting in here, we said: 'We're losing balls every time we go out to training,'' Wennberg says. 'We wondered if anyone was stealing them. It turned out the players in that age group, including Isak, would take a ball each time. They would put it in their own ball bag, then bring it to come and do extra training on these pitches when we didn't know it.'
Wennberg and Gustafsson paint pictures together for almost an hour. There is the tale of when Isak, preparing to take a kick-off, swivelled and scored directly; then a detailed explanation of his short‑term deployment in midfield to broaden his vision and durability; a flurry of arrows drawn on the whiteboard detailing the combination drills that Isak mastered to a tee. Another story recounts when, having recently signed his first-team deal and been told not to play in junior games, he travelled to a youth tournament and sat among the coaches. 'He just wanted to be with the boys, and that is Alexander,' Wennberg says.
Isak's teammates in Sweden's squad, who should surely be challenging at the business end of tournaments with an attack that also includes Viktor Gyökeres and Dejan Kulusevski, report that he has noticeably hit fresh heights in the past year. 'They also say he's exactly the same person,' Gustafsson says. 'His success has not changed him at all.'
Sitting in a cafe 15 minutes away, Henok Goitom does not mask his pride. 'Every time I see his name my heart goes 'whump',' says the former AIK striker, a club legend who also coached at the academy until December. Goitom's interest in Isak is personal and almost paternal. The pair share Eritrean heritage and the seeds of their relationship were sown when a young Goitom, who is 40, took after-school lessons in the Tigrinya language from Isak's father, Teame. He liked Teame's empowering, easygoing manner and they continued to cross paths.
'Eventually I went to play abroad but I would always see him back here on Eritrean independence day, which is a party in Sweden,' he says. 'Then, once I had returned and signed for AIK, his father came to the training ground. I hadn't seen him for a long time. We talked about those lessons he gave me, and then he said: 'I have a son, he's in the juniors.' Alex was about 15 and that was when I first learned about his existence.'
Teame asked Goitom to keep an eye on his son if any help were needed. Shortly after, Isak trained with the first team and showed more of the imperviousness that wowed Mineirji. 'We had a possession drill, and it may sound like nothing but it was a massive sign for me of how far he'd go,' Goitom says. 'He's 15 and I'm 31: if I want the ball you'll give me the ball. But there was a sequence when he had it and turned, but didn't pass it to me. I was like: 'How can he do that?' But then it hit me that he hasn't passed because I had an opponent next to me. From that moment I knew he was brilliantly intelligent.'
The pair stay in contact by occasional text; Goitom plays down suggestions he has been a mentor to Isak but others say his influence was significant. Isak grew up in Bagartorp, a modest estate nearby from which the national stadium Strawberry Arena is visible and walkable. It is prime AIK catchment territory but it is also the realm of the street: of hard knocks but also of fun; of sussing out how to make your way.
'You see a cockiness in the academy, but in a good way,' Goitom says. 'The cockiness of 'I can dribble past you', but never forgetting that it's easy to fade away. Hard work and running a lot: you need to have these things too. One of the things in our Eritrean culture is that you always need to do more, and you take mental strength from it.'
It took Isak to Borussia Dortmund, Willem II, Real Sociedad and now to Newcastle's date with destiny. He has been handcrafted into a figure who could write his own tale and the mind goes back to Wennberg's response when asked how important Isak's successes have been to AIK. 'We don't go walking around on clouds here,' Wennberg says. 'It's Alex's story and we have no right to dictate it. We're just part of it.'

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Scottish Sun
an hour ago
- Scottish Sun
Six ways it could end up for Alexander Isak and Newcastle including dream Liverpool transfer and move to former rivals
Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) ALEXANDER ISAK has seen his relationship with Newcastle hit rock-bottom following a bombshell transfer statement. The striker is desperate to join Liverpool before deadline day, with SunSport exclusively revealing their plans for a record £130million swoop next week. Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up 1 There are six possible options for Alexander Isak this summer after his bombshell statement Credit: PA Isak blasted Toon last night, claiming that 'trust has been lost' while demanding his switch to Anfield. In response, Newcastle hit back by insisting the Swede will not be sold unless it is 'in the best interests' of the club. But just how will Isak's transfer showdown play out? Here, SunSport's Anthony Chapman examines six ways it could end for the Newcastle misfit… READ MORE IN FOOTBALL SPLASH THE REDDIES Liverpool approve record Isak transfer as Reds plot £165m double-deal SOLD TO LIVERPOOL The ideal ending for Isak is to get his move to Anfield. Liverpool are determined to sign him despite already landing Hugo Ekitike and Florian Wirtz. But the Reds insist they will not pay beyond their means. The champs are happy to pay £130m, but if Newcastle demand a penny more it could scupper the entire move. BEST FREE BETS AND BETTING SIGN UP OFFERS STRIKE FOR THE YEAR Isak has downed his tools and is refusing to train or play. That's despite having three years left on his contract. 'That bothers me' - Jamie Carragher tells Liverpool NOT to sign £150million Alexander Isak from Newcastle Betfair - Isak to sign before 2nd September 2025 Not to sign or agree a contract with any other club 4/6 Liverpool 8/11 Any Saudi Pro League Club 25/1 PSG 40/1 Arsenal 66/1 Real Madrid 66/1 Chelsea 66/1 Barcelona 80/1 Man United 100/1 If a move to Liverpool doesn't occur, it could see Isak rot in the reserves for at least the next 12 months. But once his year in solitary is over, the door would likely be open for him to finally quit - with clubs like Barcelona and Bayern Munich possibly needing a new striker next summer. RESOLVE AND PAY RISE Newcastle's dream ending, for the players AND Howe. The only way back for Isak, in the eyes of fans, is to sign a new contract. That would reaffirm his commitment to the club. But it would likely end his chances of ever leaving in a big-money move. Shearer's thoughts on Isak Alan Shearer told The Rest Is Football podcast: 'Isak's got three years left. You can't not train or play. You're being paid by the football club. 'Whatever reason, whatever hump you've got, you still have a duty to the other players because of that contract, and to the football club, to go and train and go and play. 'There's a way of getting out of a football club, and refusing to train and play is not the right way.' When asked by Gary Lineker if Isak's situation mirrored that of Alexander-Arnold in his final months at Anfield, Shearer replied: 'You can't compare them at all. 'Trent came to the end of his contract, he didn't refuse to play, he didn't refuse to train. 'And then was well within his rights to leave. Isak's got three years left on his contract. It doesn't take a genius to work that out. 'I sat down with him five, six months ago and I didn't see this in him. I thought he was a manager's dream, the way he spoke.' 'So obviously something has massively upset him and we don't know that. But those two circumstances, Trent and Isak, are totally different.' STAY A YEAR, SELL TO NON-RIVAL Another solution could be for Isak to put aside his issues and agree to stay for a year. This would then see Newcastle sell the Swede next summer at a set price. However, the door may only be open to a non-rival club in order for Toon to protect their interests in the Premier League. One past example was Luka Modric's move from Tottenham to Real Madrid in 2012, when the previous year saw him push to join London rivals Chelsea. Isak to Liverpool transfer saga timeline JANUARY: First links to Liverpool emerge FEBRUARY: 150million record fee mooted MARCH: Isak denies Newcastle contract talk APRIL: Edd Howe hails Isak as 'very professional.' MAY: Howe insists Isak will not be sold Howe insists Isak will not be sold Last match in Newcastle shirt JUNE: Transfer links to Liverpool heat up JULY: Flies with Newcastle for Austria training camp Flies with Newcastle for Austria training camp Left out of Celtic friendly Liverpool hijack Toon's Hugo Ekitike deal after making Isak enquiry Doesn't travel for pre-season tour of Singapore and South Korea, citing injury AUGUST: Training by himself at Newcastle Training by himself at Newcastle Liverpool have £110m bid rejected Isak stops training and goes on strike Moves out of his apartment Releases angry statement blasting 'trust has been lost' Newcastle respond by insisting he won't be sold unless it benefits club SAUDI TRANSFER The oil-rich clubs of the Middle East are always on the hunt for a big name. And many are sure to be watching from the sideline in case Isak opens the door to a switch late on. The wages on offer could certainly make it a tempting offer if there are no other options on the table. But Toon's ownership by Saudi's PIF, who are also in charge of most of their nation's top clubs, means they would not be able to use the Isak money to balance PSR and Financial Fair Play numbers. LOAN EXIT A final way out for Isak could be a temporary one. A loan move would allow him and Newcastle to part ways and put their issues on hold for one season. Then next summer, the two parties can meet with all cards already on the table. Victor Osimhen had a similar situation last year as he eventually moved from Napoli to Galatasaray, while Marcus Rashford ditched Man Utd for Aston Villa before joining Barcelona.


Daily Mirror
an hour ago
- Daily Mirror
Hidden Alexander Isak transfer clause that could complicate Liverpool move further
Alexander Isak has broken his silence after becoming embroiled in a transfer saga involving Liverpool, with Newcastle issuing a response, though one contractual clause could further complicate things Newcastle's Alexander Isak has broken his silence as his Liverpool transfer saga continues. Though a clause in the 25-year-old's contract concerning former club Real Sociedad could throw yet another spanner into the works. The Swedish striker made it clear last month that he wanted to explore his options away from St James' Park, and while the Reds did submit a £110million bid, this fell well below Newcastle's valuation. A stalemate has since been met, with Isak refusing to play for the club, and the Magpies insisting he is not for sale and will remain on Tyneside unless an adequate offer is made. On Tuesday, Isak spoke for the first time since the drama unfolded, explaining his absence from the Professional Footballers' Association's awards gala. Newcastle issued a telling reply, as the possibility of an agreement with Liverpool remains up in the air, though a sell-on clause inserted into the 25-year-old's contract could further complicate matters. Isak's statement was damning. In light of this increasingly noxious disagreement, the star striker, who has been training away from Newcastle's first team, claimed promises had been broken. "I've kept quiet for a long time while others have spoken," wrote Isak. "That silence has allowed people to push their own version of events, even though they know it doesn't reflect what was really said and agreed behind closed doors. "The reality is that promises were made and the club has known my position for a long time. To now act as if these issues are only emerging is misleading. "When promises are broken and trust is lost, the relationship can't continue. That's where things are for me right now - and why change is in the best interests of everyone, not just myself." Yet, a deal for Isak would be complicated. The Reds' £110m package was swiftly rebuked, and it is thought that Isak is valued at a whopping £150m. Nevertheless, it seems a British record transfer fee is what it would take to secure his services. Adding further complications is a sell-on clause that was inserted in Isak's deal when he moved to Newcastle from Real Sociedad in 2022. The Swede arrived in England for a fee of £63m, and a 10 per cent capital gains clause was attached to his deal, as per the Athletic. This clause would see the Spanish side receive that percentage of any profits made from the future sale of Isak. Should he be sold for £150m, for example, this would see a sum of £8.7m go to Spain. Such a stipulation could cause Newcastle to demand an even higher price for Isak, and Liverpool could have to pay extra to ensure the Magpies receive a final sum they are satisfied with. As their reply to Isak's statement suggests, Newcastle themselves do not see a deal being completed this window. It read: "We are clear in response that Alex remains under contract and that no commitment has ever been made by a club official that Alex can leave Newcastle United this summer. We want to keep our best players, but we also understand players have their own wishes and we listen to their views. "As explained to Alex and his representatives, we must always take into consideration the best interests of Newcastle United, the team and our supporters in all decisions and we have been clear that the conditions of a sale this summer have not transpired. "We do not foresee those conditions being met. This is a proud football club with proud traditions and we strive to retain our family feel. Alex remains part of our family and will be welcomed back when he is ready to rejoin his team-mates." Join our new WhatsApp community and receive your daily dose of Mirror Football content. We also treat our community members to special offers, promotions, and adverts from us and our partners. If you don't like our community, you can check out any time you like. If you're curious, you can read our Privacy Notice.


BBC News
2 hours ago
- BBC News
'Move on' and 'not as keen' - fan views on Isak saga
We asked for your views on whether Alexander Isak will join Liverpool after the Newcastle striker and his club exchanged words regarding his are some of your comments:Dave: At the start of the transfer window, I would have seen Isak as a priority signing. With the arrival of Ekitike and Wirtz, and especially with how Isak has portrayed himself in the last month, I am nowhere near as keen. I actually think a centre-back signing is more important now Surely it's now 'when' not 'if', but then again we're waiting for Newcastle to sign at least one striker. We'll soon see, but it's been messy at best. With Isak though LFC will be expected to win the lot. It ramps expectation to new heights not experienced since the Personally I feel Newcastle are running out of time as Isak has made it clear he wants Liverpool and won't play for them again. It's only because they have wealthy backers they haven't let him go yet. £120m will allow them to throw big money at another decent striker or Leave him there. He's a I don't want him now. To show that attitude to your club is frankly not the behaviour of a player Liverpool should have. He will only do it to us in three years when Madrid come in for him. Ekitike has shown his worth already - why discard him to the bench or the wing?Mark: It's dragging on too long. It's best for everyone now that Isak gets his move. I can't see any good coming from him remaining at It's pretty clear - Isak wants to join us but Newcastle have let him down. I hope we get him (and there's still a chance we will this window) but even if we don't, I'll be very happy with Hugo Ekitike up front. He's already becoming a fan favourite. We do, however, need another forward or two as we are looking a little light up front. I'm sure we'll get something done. As this window has shown, we actually have a good recruitment team. Newcastle's recruitment team is practically Can't trust him, what happens when he nears the end of a contract at Liverpool? Move on and get a defender, he's not for sale.