
Meet Jude Geoghegan, inspirational coach with spine defect who realised Wembley dream at Community Shield
COACH OF THE YEAR Meet Jude Geoghegan, inspirational coach with spine defect who realised Wembley dream at Community Shield
JUDE GEOGHEGAN celebrated the proudest moment of his young career at with a Wembley award this weekend.
The 20-year-old was born with a spine condition which means he has to use crutches in everyday life.
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Jude Geoghegan has overcome a spine condition to realise his Wembley dream
Credit: The FA
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The 20-year-old won Coach of the Year Disability Pathway at the Grassroots Football Awards, and was presented with his prize by FA chief Mark Bullingham and Paul Merson
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But the determined youngster didn't let that stand in the way of his football dreams.
Jude started an inclusion team at his side Estudiantes in north London, creating opportunities for players with all different levels of disability.
And Geoghegan won Coach of the Year Disability Pathway at the Grassroots Football Awards this weekend.
He was presented with his prize by Paul Merson and FA chief Mark Bullingham before the Community Shield on Sunday.
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The 20-year-old spoke to SunSport before Liverpool's clash with Crystal Palace.
He said: "Being here is something I've dreamed of - it means a lot to me, and my family and friends as well.
"Since I started coaching 11 months ago, it's been something that I've really wanted to get to and I feel like I've accomplished that."
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Jude Geoghegan is a fan of Tottenham and his taken his programme to Premier League club bases
Credit: The FA
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Geoghegan has Spina Bifida - a neural tube defect.
According to the NHS website, it is when a baby's spine and spinal cord do not develop properly in the womb, causing a gap in the spine.
Geoghegan said: "It affects my walking because I use crutches.
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"But I've overcome that because I've started to realise that there's a lot of inclusive pathways in sport.
"I got into football when I was five or six years old.
"I always used to play outside my back garden but never used to really get into a team.
"In 2021, I became part of the Estudiantes London.
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"They really made me feel included and that's when we started our inclusion programme.
"I started coaching because I wanted to make football more inclusive at the club I was at.
"I found it a bit nerve-wracking at first, but in the last six or seven months I've gained more confidence."
Geoghegan is a Tottenham supporter, but has taken his programme to Premier League grounds for training sessions.
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He still has big ambitions for coaching despite already overcoming the odds.
"We've been to Chelsea and Fulham," he said. "And month we go to Watford as well.
"I want to start coaching and opening doors within Premier League clubs and try and improve the inclusion programme.
"The team have got a lot more confident in their playing, they're much more talkative.
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"I feel it gives them a lot of confidence to do what I do, whether it's playing or coaching, because you never know where you could end up."
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Irish Independent
5 hours ago
- Irish Independent
Liverpool's opening night marred by racist incident as late show from Chiesa and Salah foils Bournemouth comeback
As four of their forwards scored, as their showed how devastating they can be in attack, it is becoming ever more apparent that Arne Slot has already signed a high-class striker this summer, one with sleekness and speed, the potential to be prolific and an ability to excel at Anfield. And yet a manager who lamented, after taking Hugo Ekitike off in the Community Shield, that he did not have an understudy, conjured a dramatic victory courtesy of Anfield's forgotten forward. Federico Chiesa's belated first Premier League goal came a year after his arrival, and yet with perfect timing, hooked in from the penalty spot after Bournemouth, from 2-0 down, had levelled to leave their fans chorusing about being top of the league. Then they were bottom: Chiesa, a player of great pedigree, albeit one whose body can let him down and whose manager rarely seems to trust him, delivered the masterly finish, before Mohamed Salah's habitual opening-day strike clinched the win. The chances are that Chiesa will end up back in Italy before the transfer window closes. And yet, on a night that suggested all Liverpool require is a deputy for Ekitike, he proved the ideal understudy. And yet a game that had contained much of the best the division has to offer, whether in its pace and thrilling finish, the excitement of new arrivals and the competitiveness of Andoni Iraola's fearless Bournemouth, it was marred, disgracefully, by the first incident of racist abuse of the Premier League season, directed at Antoine Semenyo, causing the game to be halted by referee Anthony Taylor in the first half. The suspected offender was removed at the interval by the police. It should go without saying that footballers should not have to provide eloquent rejoinders to racial abuse, but Semenyo did anyway. His was an outstanding display, his second-half brace dragging Bournemouth back into the game and, after the Community Shield, underlining concerns that Slot's new-look Liverpool have lost control and look too susceptible defensively. But they look full of goals. Ekitike had scored after four minutes of his bow in the Community Shield. It took him 37 to open his Premier League account. He added an assist for good measure. With the Frenchman in this form, would Liverpool's £110m bid for Isak only have bought them the most expensive of substitutes? There was some fortune in the way Ekitike got past Marcos Senesi, none in his cool finish, sidefooted past Djordje Petrovic. The departed Darwin Nunez rarely demonstrated such calmness in front of goal. Ekitike also served as a focal point, linking play intelligently. He teed up Cody Gakpo when the winger cut infield to place a shot in the far corner of the net. The Dutchman may be the beneficiary of Luis Diaz's sale, his status as the first-choice left winger apparent right now, and this was a fine finish. Yet on an evening when one newcomer excelled, another was given a torrid time, the £40m signing Milos Kerkez targeted by Bournemouth and tormented by his former teammate Semenyo. He should have been booked before he was, got hooked on the hour and yet Semenyo's goals came when his immediate opponent was Andy Robertson. But Liverpool failed to close the game down. Semenyo swept in a shot from David Brooks' low cross and then both leading a break from his edge of his own box and finishing it as Liverpool were cut open far too easily. Their new centre-back, the £26m signing Giovanni Leoni, watched on from the stands, perhaps realising that he may have his work cut out unless this team can tighten up. Slot's defensive substitutions had been followed by Bournemouth goals. His attacking changes led to Liverpool scoring. He summoned Chiesa at 2-2, replacing Florian Wirtz, and it proved a terrific decision. Then Salah extended his own record of goals in the division's opening weekend, his 10th a brilliant finish with his right foot. It was, though, about a fifth Liverpool forward, besides the goalscorers, the man whose name was heard but who has been taken from their ranks. Salah was tearful at the end remembering his lost friend. Anfield, the Bournemouth fans included, had paid a moving tribute to Diogo Jota. The loudest renditions of the Portuguese's name here was both a reminder of tragedy and a rallying cry. Ekitike celebrated his goal by mimicking the 20, the shirt number that will never be worn again. Liverpool did much right, on and off the field, but it was tarnished by the actions of one in the crowd.


Irish Examiner
7 hours ago
- Irish Examiner
Liverpool's attacking firepower clear but also their defensive frailties
FOR ALL THE FOCUS on Liverpool's revamped forward line, which may yet be further supplemented by Newcastle United's unhappy Swede Alexander Isak, Arne Slot knows full well that league titles are won or lost by defences. The Dutchman inherited a world-class backline when he took over at Anfield a year ago, and ensured his men were miserly in the early months of what turned out to be a title-winning season. Liverpool did not concede once in their opening three games, all wins, and after a surprise 1-0 defeat by Nottingham Forest, then conceded two in the next four games. Their opening eight league games brought seven victories, with just three goals conceded, and took them to the top of the table, from where they never wavered. Slot had the second meanest defence in the division, conceding 41 times at just over a goal per game, but nine of those came in the final four matches, after they had wrapped up the title and were coasting towards their summer holidays. But it's already looking like a very different picture. Pegged back twice by Crystal Palace in last week's Community Shield, Liverpool conceded twice again as the unfancied Cherries picked them off with too much ease for Slot's liking. From being 2-0 ahead after 49 minutes, Liverpool looked like letting it slip when Antoine Semenyo scored twice in the space of 12 minutes to equalise, only for Federico Chiesa and Mohamed Salah to score two late goals and complete victory for the Reds. There was a huge sense of relief from Liverpool's fans when they scored, not least because Bournemouth looked at one point like they might take all three points. So nervous and unsettled was Liverpool's defence that Bournemouth had enough chances throughout to score more than four. Despite the dramatic victory, expectations around Anfield will be dampened now the world has seen they are fallible at the back. Jeremie Frimpong, who has arrived to replace Trent Alexander-Arnold at right-back, shares the English international's defensive frailties, and was hooked early in the second half for the second game running. Milos Kerkez, poached from Bournemouth, was also replaced long before the end, as Slot looked to stem a tide from the south coast team. None of the defenders was faultless. Virgil Van Dijk had played David Brooks onside before he crossed for Semenyo's first, and he and Konate looked like rabbits in car headlights when the former Bristol City winger, who was the victim of racial abuse from the crowd, ran at them for his second. Slot knows he has work to do with his defence, and he cannot say he has not been warned. Jamie Carragher, who embodied defensive solidity when he was a player for the Reds said earlier this week, when Sky Sports launched their coverage of the new Premier League season, that he does not see a procession towards another title for the Reds, mostly because they have to assimilate the signings they have already made – and may have to fit in one or two more if Isak and Marc Guehi can be tempted away from Newcastle United and Crystal Palace respectively. 'I don't think it's inevitable that Liverpool are going to run away with the league, you know, because they've signed this player and that player and the league (title race) is over. 'History tells us it is not just about having the best players, but having the best team and getting the balance right, and last weekend it didn't quite look right.' At Wembley last week, Slot's new-look attack looked impressive, with Hugo Ekitike scoring early on his competitive debut, and setting up another for Cody Gakpo. Florian Wirtz showed flashes of the brilliance that prompted Liverpool to sign him for an English record fee, but as he did against Palace, the German faded and was withdrawn before the end. All the transfer talk this summer has been about whether Liverpool can get a deal for Isak over the line, with the fee likely to break the record they set with Wirtz's signing. But the ways things are looking with Ekitike, the Reds are well set up front, but not settled at the back, and perhaps Guehi should now become their priority. The England international is in the last year of his contract so would be a free transfer next summer, when Konate is expected to leave Liverpool. The way things are going, the Reds would do well to spend the money now on Guehi and ship out Konate, or at least put the Palace man straight in ahead of him. Liverpool still have the goal power to win games, but as it stands they do not appear to have the same solidity in defence that set them on their way to the title last season – and Slot needs to address that sooner rather than later.


RTÉ News
8 hours ago
- RTÉ News
Liverpool leave it late to start Premier League season with nervy win over Bournemouth
Liverpool's defence of their Premier League title got off to an unconvincing start but the late 4-2 victory was soured by alleged racist abuse directed at Bournemouth's Antoine Semenyo. The winger responded brilliantly with both the Cherries' goals as they came from two down as Andoni Iraola's side exposed the same defensive weaknesses Crystal Palace did in Sunday's Community Shield victory. But forgotten man Federico Chiesa, Liverpool's solitary signing last summer who has barely featured and whose future looked to be elsewhere, volleyed home his first league goal in the 88th minute before Mohamed Salah scored for the eighth time in nine opening-day fixtures. But that did not diminish what was hugely-deserved credit for Semenyo, who did not allow the first-half incident to throw him off his game, as he gave former team-mate and Liverpool's new left-back Milos Kerkez a torrid time. Liverpool had announced the £23million signing of 18-year-old Parma centre-back Giovanni Leoni before kick-off but it would be no surprise for this result to hasten the pursuit of Crystal Palace's Marc Guehi with Ibrahima Konate, in particular, looking particularly shaky. It had begun so well with another new signing Hugo Ekitike starting to pay back his £69million transfer fee with a first-half goal, having scored last weekend. But shortly afterwards referee Anthony Taylor halted play, calling Liverpool head coach Arne Slot and Iraola together with the fourth official Farai Hallam to tell them the Semenyo had reported a racist comment from a fan at the front of the Main Stand. It is also understood police visited the officials' dressing room at half-time. Within four minutes of the second half starting Cody Gakpo, via an Ekitike assist, doubled the lead but Liverpool were far from their best on a night when Anfield remembered former striker Diogo Jota and his brother Andre Silva after their deaths in a car crash last month. In the Kop there was a banner dedicated to Jota's family, who in the week Slot said he expected to be in attendance, which said 'Anfield will always be your home. You'll never walk alone', while Bournemouth fans brought their own which read 'Diogo Jota. 20 Together'. Perimeter hoardings read 'Rest in peace Diogo Jota and Andre Silva', and fans in the Sir Kenny Dalglish Stand and the Kop held 'AS 30' and 'DJ 20′ mosaics during the minute's silence while Jota's song was sung at kick-off. Ekitike extended his own tribute by signalling a two and a zero – Jota's now-retired shirt number – with his fingers after his 37th minute goal. The France Under-21 international thought he had been denied by the season's first VAR controversy after just 14 minutes when Marcos Senesi appeared to flick the ball away on the halfway line but VAR ruled it was not a clear handball or the denial of a goalscoring opportunity. Ekitike then benefited from a more fortuitous touch off the defender, latching onto a mistake after his own miscontrol of Alexis Mac Allister's pass to run through and comfortably send Djordje Petrovic the wrong way. He then headed over before half-time but his assimilation into the role vacated by Jota and Darwin Nunez, sold to Al-Hilal, was evident as he laid on the return pass for Gakpo to glide past a couple of defenders and stroke past Petrovic. But when Slot replaced both full-backs Jeremie Frimpong and Milos Kerkez, two of the four new signings making their debuts, Bournemouth clinically exploited the unfamiliarity of midfielder Wataru Endo playing at right-back. David Brooks raced down the left and Konate could not prevent him sending over a teasing, low cross which Semenyo cleverly finished. Slot made immediate changes, bringing on defender Joe Gomez despite just two days' training after three weeks out with injury, to allow Endo to move into midfield and club-record signing Florian Wirtz moving to a false nine for Ekitike. But when Salah, of all people, gave away possession on the edge of the opposition penalty area a fast four-on-two counter-attack saw Semenyo fire home, only for Chiesa, already a cult hero despite his lack of action, to be the saviour. Salah completed the scoring in added-time and was last to leave the pitch, with tears in his eyes, having stood applauding the Kop singing Jota's song.