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Inside Leeds' wild promotion celebrations with thousands of fans greeting team and former Man Utd star on the mic

Inside Leeds' wild promotion celebrations with thousands of fans greeting team and former Man Utd star on the mic

The Sun22-04-2025

LEEDS celebrated promotion back to the Premier League in jubilant scenes at Elland Road.
A 6-0 thumping of Stoke followed by Burnley's win over Sheffield United secured Leeds' return to the top flight.
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There were wild celebrations as fans and players alike partied hard after the momentous achievement.
Leeds winger Largie Ramazani took fans behind-the-scenes and interviewed his team-mates as they enjoyed their success.
Amid champagne bottles being sprayed and players dancing Ramazani tried to ask the Leeds stars their thoughts on gaining promotion.
Left-back Junior Firpo said: "It's an unbelievable day. I'm really happy, I just want to enjoy now."
While Ao Tanaka shouted into the mic: "I am so happy. So happy. I can't find the words."
Captain Ethan Ampadu and Patrick Bamford had few words to say but Manor Solomon, on loan from Tottenham, said: "I'm feeling amazing. I can't find the words I'm so happy."
The likes of Wilfried Gnonto, Pascal Struijk and Joel Piroe - who put four past Stoke - celebrated with promotion banners draped around their shoulders.
Ramazani, a former Manchester United youth player, then picked one up and flung it around before dancing, leading one fan to brand him the new Ezgjan Alioski - Leeds' chief partyer the last time they were promoted to the Prem in 2020.
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Players also sang along to 'Don't you know pump it up, the Whites are going up!'.
Boss Daniel Farke later stepped outside to greet the thousands of fas gathered outside Elland Road.
Leeds manager Daniel Farke reveals the Sir Alex Ferguson trick he cannot copy
He danced along as fans sang his name and led a big cheer before applauding the crowd.
After promotion was confirmed, Farke said: 'I'm lost for words, which doesn't happen that often. You could see from this morning that the atmosphere was amazing.
"94 points at this stage of the season is unbelievable. The players should celebrate, our supporters should celebrate and we will definitely make sure that Easter Monday lasts for one or two more days.
"It's difficult on such an emotional day to reflect too much but it was a long road. It's not easy to stabilise the ship after relegation, and to deal with the lost important players and a hangover from relegation.
"I just want right now beer after beer, champagne after champagne and don't bother me about football for a few days.'
"We were not able to spend too much money and I was also a bit jealous that some other clubs could spend money."
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England starting lineup tonight as major changes made after Andorra debacle
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  • Daily Mirror

England starting lineup tonight as major changes made after Andorra debacle

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Tragedies and triumphs of England's Italia 90 heroes
Tragedies and triumphs of England's Italia 90 heroes

Telegraph

time34 minutes ago

  • Telegraph

Tragedies and triumphs of England's Italia 90 heroes

They are the men who made modern football. The England players' heroics at the 1990 World Cup came at a time of desolation and despair for the beautiful game. Almost overnight the horrors of hooliganism were forgotten as the brilliance of Paul Gascoigne, Gary Lineker and co made the nation fall in love with football again. On this wave of euphoria, the Premier League kicked off and football was never the same again. Now, 35 years after the Italia 90 tournament, we analyse what happened next for the England squad – and discover a host of off-field traumas added to noteworthy triumphs. Football through a new lens It's Epsom Derby day in 1990 and ITV is about to broadcast live from Sardinia for an unusual segment. Poolside at the Is Molas Hotel and Bryan Robson and Peter Shilton are taking charge of a sweepstake for the 22-man England squad. Jim Rosenthal, ITV's roving reporter, is overseeing the fun. 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'Football did an absolute double-somersault with tuck... it was a month that changed the beautiful game completely,' Rosenthal now says. 'Football was not something you spoke about at dinner tables – now you had three-quarters of a million people lining the streets. 'We literally lived with the team. It helped that the people liked what they saw coming through the televisions. They were a hell of a good group – very strong characters. 'TV was getting better and better – and so you had those images like Gazza's tears. Some people think football started with the Premier League. That's madness. Italia 90 changed the way people thought about football. It paved the way for everything that followed.' When you consider what has followed – the growth of a multi-billion-pound juggernaut, state-of-the-art stadiums and a domestic game that is the envy of the world – there can be no doubt about the historic influence of Sir Bobby Robson's England. It also helped that they were so relatable. And, as they largely now approach pensionable age (Shilton, Robson and Terry Butcher are already there), just about all human life and experience can be found. Rise of the craftsmen Chris Waddle has never actually stopped lacing up his boots during a steady journey back down through the pyramid after leaving Sheffield Wednesday with cult-hero status in 1996. 'I'm actually playing for Worksop Town – well, Worksop Vets – a week on Saturday,' he says, ahead of his 65th birthday later this year. 'I'll find a position where I don't have to run around and I can get the ball at me feet – we'll be all right.' Waddle was combining working in a sausage seasoning factory with turning out for non-League Tow Law Town when he was signed for £1,000 in 1980 by Newcastle United. By the time of Italia 90, Waddle had moved to French champions Marseille, for whom he would reach the Champions League final the following year. 'Marseille was 80 degrees for six or seven months – you couldn't run around like a chicken with no head – and they liked skilful players,' he explains. 'Even though I had a mullet, I let my hair down and I just went to enjoy it.' Zinedine Zidane, no less, still cites Waddle among his boyhood heroes and, at a time when English clubs were banned from Europe, he brought a tactical know-how as well as technical class to an England squad that was far better than most had appreciated. '[Gary] Lineker was as good a goalscorer as anybody, then you had [Peter] Beardsley or [John] Barnes,' says Waddle. 'The midfield three that night [for the semi-final against West Germany in Turin] was me, Gazza and David Platt. No hard man. Me and Gazza just balanced off and we kept saying to David Platt to get in the box alongside Lineker when the ball went wide. 'Mark Wright was a great sweeper, Terry Butcher left, Des Walker right, Paul Parker right wing-back who could play centre-half. Stuart Pearce loved to bomb on. We definitely thought we could win it.' Waddle had been among those advocating the more flexible tactics that Robson would ultimately employ and witnessed first hand a big change in how English football was perceived abroad. Average top-flight attendances for the 1989-90 season were just over 20,000. They now stand at more than 40,000. 'I remember speaking to Franz Beckenbauer [the West Germany manager] who became coach at Marseille after the World Cup,' says Waddle. 'He said: 'We knew our hardest game would be England. There was nothing between us – whoever won it would win the final.' When he's talking like that, all of a sudden you think: 'Yeah, we did have a very good side.' That team turned heads.' Triumphs, tragedy and a search for normality Lineker was not even 30 at Italia 90 but was already being nicknamed 'Junior Des' in reference to his desire to follow in the footsteps of the BBC's Des Lynam. It was Gascoigne who came up with the moniker and, while Lineker has since barely left the public eye, others have forged decidedly different paths. According to the Professional Footballers' Association, the average top-flight salary was £41,600 in 1990, between two and three times more than the average wage. That would soon rise dramatically (Barnes became the first £10,000-a-week player by the time of the Premier League's launch in 1992-93) but even those experiencing a small taste of the subsequent riches would need to keep working. Many followed Lineker into broadcasting and some sort of punditry, notably Waddle and Butcher, who were popular BBC commentators on England matches across several decades. Coaching and management have been predictably popular. Butcher, who captained England in the knock-out phase, also managed 10 clubs but was touched by unimaginable tragedy in 2017 when his son Chris, a captain in the British Army, died of an enlargement of the heart combined with the effect of drugs 'against a background of Post Traumatic Stress Disorder'. It followed stints in Iraq and Afghanistan. After the inquest, Butcher described Chris as a 'victim of war'. Butcher's former Rangers team-mate Gary Stevens, who is now a physiotherapist in Australia, also suffered the heartbreaking loss of a child – in 2021, his four-year-old son Jack died from a rare form of leukaemia – and he has since formed the Forever Four charity with wife Louise to raise awareness of stem-cell donation. Platt, who famously scored the last-16 winner against Belgium that was a turning point in the competition, has been another to combine media work with coaching, He managed Sampdoria and Nottingham Forest before working alongside Roberto Mancini at Manchester City. His response to an interview request before the last World Cup indicated his shifting priorities. 'I'm afraid I don't do media any more,' he said. 'I am happy living how I am doing. It's exciting searching for anonymity.' As even Lineker has found, it is a younger generation of former players now generally moving into prime positions in broadcasting and coaching. 🌍🏆 World Cup iconic moments: 📆 26 June, 1990 🏟️ Stadio Renato Dall'Ara, Bologna Substitute David Platt grabs an extra-time winner for @England to send the Three Lions into the quarter-finals of Italia 90 — ITV Football (@itvfootball) June 2, 2018 Beardsley, another wonderfully skilled player from the North East, would lose his job coaching at Newcastle United after a Football Association panel found he made racist comments to three players. Beardsley had denied the charges – and would receive a character reference at the hearing from his former England and Liverpool room-mate John Barnes – but has not returned to a professional coaching role. He does apparently still play five-a-side twice a week and is in regular contact with old mentors and strike partners Lineker and Kevin Keegan. Indeed he made a surprise appearance on Lineker's Rest is Football podcast. Beardsley's departure from Newcastle was ignored on the show but it felt striking to hear him talk about the cultures he experienced after moving into football from a ship-yard factory in the late Seventies. 'The banter the minute you walked through the gate is unbuyable,' he said. 'In that era, that we were lucky enough to play in, anything went. Nobody got offended.' Others have stayed more permanently out of football's bubble. Neil Webb, who had also helped Manchester United win the FA Cup in 1990, sparked headlines in 2002 when it was revealed that he was working as a postman. It was put on the front page of The Sun, with Webb feeling moved to apologise to his colleagues over coverage he felt had belittled their jobs. 'Football doesn't owe me a life – I had a 2½-hour walk every day and it kept me quite fit,' he later said. Webb has since worked in various jobs, including as a delivery driver, and put his first England cap and shirt up for sale two years ago. 'My generation earned good money and you could buy a nice house, a nice car – but it is a different world for today's players,' he said.' Mark Wright had kept seven different shirts from Italia 90 – including Shilton's semi-final goalkeeper jersey – and sold them at auction for more than £100,000. Wright, who managed Peterborough, Chester, Southport and Oxford United during an eclectic career, also became a foster parent in 2008 and has been a vocal ambassador in raising awareness for the importance of foster care and adoption. He is also a board member at Fair Result, a divorce resolution service which is designed to ease costs and stress following a marriage break-up. Footballers, including those from Italia 90, have long been in disproportionately high need for such help once retirement sets in. The best shirt-sale story, however, still belongs to former Nottingham Forest midfielder Steve Hodge. He was in the 1990 squad but did not play a match, leaving the 1986 quarter-final against Argentina as his last World Cup finals appearance. That was on the night when Diego Maradona's sleight of hand and genius feet ended England's hopes and Hodge made the inspired snap decision in a corridor after the game to ask him to swap shirts. Even more astutely, he then bided his time and, two years after Maradona's death in 2020, the original 'Hand of God' World Cup shirt fetched £7.1 million at auction. Waddle is adamant that no one in the squad would begrudge Hodge the payday. Rather different financial headlines were prompted last year when it emerged that Barnes had been banned from acting as a company director until 2027, after a business – which went into liquidation in 2023 – had previously failed to pay £190,000 in taxes. Other jobs away from football have included Des Walker's work as an articulated lorry driver. Walker was the only member of the squad in 1990 who would routinely dodge poolside interview requests. 'He wasn't rude, he would just say 'I don't like doing it',' says Rosenthal. Walker did, however, grant Telegraph Sport a rare interview in 2021 while coaching a UK-based team of Indonesian footballers. He revealed that he had actually taken his Class One HGV test when he was playing – 'it's hard work and a lot of concentration' – and was as unsentimental as you might expect about his career. 'I can only live for tomorrow,' he said. 'I don't look back. I can't live yesterday. Football for me, as a player, is over. ' Facing addiction Flanked by his wife Steph on the sofa of their living room in West Mersea, Shilton is reflecting on the 'gut-wrenching' experience of going closer to winning the World Cup than any England team for almost 60 years. Shilton's wider contribution to England's World Cup campaign can sometimes be obscured in the context of that semi-final when West Germany scored with such a freakish deflection. 'You set up for a shot – so you come off your line a bit to narrow the angle and you are square on,' explains Shilton. 'Then, before you know it, it's going over the top. You can't run backwards when you are square. I never conceded another goal like it in my whole life. But Italia 90 was special: Nessun Dorma, being in Italy, that homecoming in Luton... there wasn't a lamppost without someone climbing up, or a window that someone wasn't looking out. Football just took off.' As well as the Derby day sweepstake, Shilton and Lineker would host horse racing nights in Sardinia by using footage of American meetings. Gascoigne, though, was able to get hold of one of the results in advance from the physio Fred Street without the knowledge of bookies Shilton and Lineker. 'We were doing quite well after three or four races – and then this sting happened and it took all the winnings,' says Shilton, chuckling. 'I remember they did a samba around the swimming pool to rub it in.' Shilton stresses that he never let an interest in more serious gambling impact on his football – 'I would completely block it out of my mind' – but would face serious problems following a monumental 1,387-game career. The turning point arrived in 2015 after yet another costly weekend and Shilton found himself calling an agent to request an advance on a future appearance. 'When I looked around, Steph was there,' he says. 'Something in me, which had been building up, said: 'What are you doing at your age? You've had 40 years to win. You're an addict. I've finished with it.' I knew I loved Steph. I didn't want to lose her.' After helping Shilton confront his addiction, Steph is now a therapist and works as the family-liaison lead for the Epic Restart Foundation. Shilton has also become an outspoken campaigner, not least on how football must further phase out its links with gambling companies. He was instrumental in the campaign to end front-of-shirt sponsorship and received the CBE at Windsor Castle last year from Prince William. 'I want people to know that you can stop,' he says. 'I was in denial. As soon as I stopped, I realised I had wasted so much time. I'm far more relaxed, I've got peace of mind, and I feel as though I've never been happier. It is not easy to come out and admit to it. When I received the CBE from Prince William, I was taken aback because the first thing he said was, 'I believe you have been doing a tremendous amount of work with gambling harm.' I was pleased but there's still a lot to be done. TV is saturated.' Another man who has faced serious addiction is, of course, Gascoigne who, after various relapses and spells in rehab, is said to be holding up pretty well just now in Dorset amid what has become a lifelong battle with alcohol. To a man, his team-mates report how his elevation into the England team in 1990 was a game-changing catalyst. 'I was buzzing... about three seconds ahead of everybody else,' says Gascoigne, of what was surely the peak of his career. He was brilliantly handled by Bobby Robson who, in the last outing of a life cut short by cancer, was at St James' Park in 2009 for an emotional charity rerun of that semi-final. On his way home, Robson's first question to his family was: 'How did Gascoigne play?' He would die only five days later. 'There were so many Gazza stories,' says Rosenthal. 'The day before the semi-final, he came down and said to Bobby: 'Have you ever had one of those saunas?' Bobby said, 'Of course – why?' Gazza said: 'I couldn't sleep last night, I spent five hours in one.' I've always said about him, the only place he was genuinely happy was on a football pitch. Bobby got the best out of Gascoigne. Typical Geordie – would give you the last spoon of sugar out of his cup of tea. Hopefully he seems to be in a reasonable place now. These players should not be forgotten. You sometimes just want to remember them the way they were... but the real world doesn't work that way.' Stuart Pearce, a proud patriot who would go on briefly to manage England as well as the Under-21s for six years, says that he has never known a football player so loved as Gascoigne. Now a regular Talksport pundit, Pearce would himself suffer a very serious health scare this year when, on a flight back from Las Vegas after watching Warrington Wolves play rugby league, he began to feel significant pressure on his chest. His heart-rate surged beyond 155 beats per minute, and he turned to his wife Carol and said: 'I don't think I'm going to make Heathrow.' The plane duly made an emergency stop in Canada following an onboard ECG, and Pearce spent 10 days in hospital. Spurred by an outpouring of goodwill, he has thankfully made an excellent recovery. 'It's been very humbling,' says Pearce. Finding purpose A quiz question. Name the select group of former England players who played in 10 or more League title-winning teams? Paul Scholes and David Beckham might come easily to mind but it is a fair bet that Trevor Steven, a multiple champion with Everton, Rangers and Marseille, might take a little longer. Steven would finish both the quarter-final and semi-final matches in 1990 after moving the previous summer from Everton to Rangers. The fact that he turned down Manchester United to move north to Rangers – then Britain's richest club – underlines the contrasting state of English football. Steven had been on £1,000 a week in England. Nowadays, Erling Haaland can command £500,000 a week, but there is no trace of bitterness from any of the players about the riches they would help inspire but not directly receive. 'I'd love the flat pitches, the technical stuff but I'm not saying I'd swap it,' says Steven. 'What I don't like, and wouldn't enjoy, is their exposure with social media... it can be a horrible place. I do find it sad that they get criticised for having a drink every now and then.' Steven also wonders what it does 'to your mindset, your psyche' to be financially set from such a young age. He is 61 now and the chief executive of the Mindflow mental health charity, which is using football to help a crisis in the construction industry in which 600 lives are being lost to suicide every year. 'It is such a short career but, when you are in it, you don't feel that because every day is intense,' he says. 'You take your breathers when you can and then all of a sudden you are almost relieved it is over. Then the years start to go by and you think, 'I lived the best days of my life before I was 35' and it is quite sobering. You are a long time retired. 'I was a football agent for two years but I hated it. I liked it at the start... then it became deregulated and got all sorts of people into the industry. I got out in 2010 – went to Dubai – and came back in 2020. I was a lost soul. There are many players in the same boat.' Steven, though, then got talking with an Everton fan and businessman called Phil Brown and their mutual interest in mindset sparked a conversation that ended up with the charity today. 'We decided to draw the dots between football, construction and mental health,' says Steven. 'Two people are dying every working day. Football is a fantastic platform. We said to each other: 'Wouldn't it be great if we can save one life?' I came back with a purpose – that was four years ago.' Lineker and Pearce are among those from Italia 90 who have sent supportive videos for the charity to use. After attending the recent Goodison Park send-off with Stevens and Beardsley, Steven hopes that a reunion dinner can be organised while all the players are still seemingly in relatively good health. It then prompts a rather touching memory of Bobby Robson at a tribute dinner for him in London. 'Arsène Wenger was talking... Alex Ferguson was talking and then Bobby talked for 55 minutes – just off the cuff,' says Steven. 'You could hear a pin drop. You could hear roars of laughter. The man was mesmerising. He could have gone on forever and we would have loved it.'

5 Liverpool stars at risk of exit once Florian Wirtz and Milos Kerkez arrive
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Daily Mirror

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  • Daily Mirror

5 Liverpool stars at risk of exit once Florian Wirtz and Milos Kerkez arrive

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Bournemouth left-back Kerkez, meanwhile, should set Liverpool back around £45m, which would take their summer spending to almost than £200m on three players after completing a move for Jeremie Frimpong. ‌ Liverpool will need to make sure they remain within the Premier League's PSR financial rules and therefore Arne Slot will have to sanction a handful of exits. ‌ After winning the Premier League, it makes sense for the Dutchman to trim his squad slightly and freshen it up. There are a handful of players whose futures are uncertain at Anfield and could be on the chopping block. Mirror Football has taken a look at five players who could be on their way out of Liverpool once they have started splashing the cash this summer. Harvey Elliott The midfielder has become a clear candidate for the exit door at Liverpool after he recently spoke out to confirm he wants to play regularly and doesn't want to "waste years of his career" on the subs bench. Elliott played just 18 times in the Premier League last season as Liverpool romped to the title, with 16 of those coming as a substitute. But should Wirtz arrive at Anfield, that could further limit his opportunities and Liverpool will know that selling Elliott would stand them in good stead as far as PSR is concerned because he is a home grown player. ‌ Elliott said: "It's just a situation that me and the team have to have a conversation about because I'm coming into an age now where I'm 22, I'm going to be 23 next season," said Elliott when asked if he is considering leaving Liverpool. "I don't really want to be wasting years on my career because it's a short career. You don't know what's going to happen. I need to reflect. I need to see if I'm content in doing what I'm doing and how can I improve as a player because that's the most important thing. "I just want to improve and be the best possible version of myself. If that's to go somewhere else, then it's a decision that I'm going to have to make and I just need to see what happens. Nothing makes me want to leave. I love the club, I love the fans, the team. I support them as well. But most importantly, it's just about what's best for my career." ‌ Federico Chiesa The Italian has barely played for Liverpool since joining from Juventus for £10m last summer, with injuries significantly halting his progress. In fact, Chiesa started just four times in all competitions and featured only 14 times in total - scoring twice - as he struggled to make an impact for Slot. Chiesa looks way down the pecking order at Anfield and there are also still doubts over his fitness levels after experiencing a number of setbacks and the Daily Mail have claimed he is considering moving back to Italy. ‌ The player himself admitted he would sit down with his agent and family to discuss his future but said he "wouldn't mind" staying with Liverpool despite enduring "frustration" with his situation. He told Corrirere dello Sport: "The year is over. But it's an experience I would do again. Soon I will sit down at the table with the club, Fali (Ramadani, his agent) and my family to find the best solution. I wouldn't mind staying in Liverpool at all. ‌ "In the autumn Liverpool were going three times as fast as the others, an incredible intensity. At the beginning I felt the frustration… The desire to play was there, I put it aside, I understood the situation." Darwin Nunez Since joining Liverpool for £85m in 2022, Nunez has been something of a 'nearly man' - always chipping in with goals but never becoming the main man at Liverpool. There was so much hope for the Uruguayan after he arrived from Benfica off the back of netting 34 times from 41 appearances. ‌ The forward can pop up with an important goal and clearly has talent but he is yet to justify his huge price tag and continues to be only a squad player under Slot. This season he only started eight times in the Premier League but it was in the cup competitions where he made his mark as he chipped in with seven goals across the season - down from 18 in 2023-24. ‌ Nunez is now being linked with a move away after being linked with Arsenal and even Manchester United, while Saudi Pro League clubs are also believed to be weighing up a move. With Luis Diaz appearing to be the first choice striker at Liverpool, Foot Mercato have claimed Al-Hilal are among those monitoring the player. Kostas Tsimikas With Kerkez coming in, it wouldn't make logical sense for Liverpool to have three left-backs, so you'd bank on one of the other two leaving the club. ‌ While Andy Robertson has appeared to fall out of favour under Slot in the last season, he remains the more experienced option who has been with Liverpool for eight seasons. Tsimikas will be the more frustrated player if - after he began to finally challenge Robertson at left-back - Kerkez comes in and replaces him immediately, therefore he could be looking to leave in the near future. ‌ Various reports have claimed Liverpool don't see Tsimikas as their main left-back long term and that he could be used as one of the players to make way for more financial leeway. He has played 114 games for Liverpool in total and clocked 28 appearances in the 2024-25 campaign but when the Reds search for players to shift, Tsimikas should be high up on the list. Joe Gomez Gomez nearly left Liverpool for Newcastle last season before the Magpies pulled the plug on the deal and was hoping for new lease of life after Slot took over from Jurgen Klopp. ‌ But Gomez had a hugely frustrating campaign that was hampered by hamstring injuries - which forced him to miss a total of 28 games. He hasn't played since February and only managed a total of 17 appearances in all competitions. ‌ Now, Slot could be ready to cash in on the injury-prone defender if an offer comes in for him this summer. According to the Liverpool Echo, Gomez is facing a "transfer crossroads" moment and it would not be a surprise if he left the club after ten years on Merseyside.

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