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🎧 Hear from Hinshelwood, Gruda and Webster

🎧 Hear from Hinshelwood, Gruda and Webster

BBC News14-05-2025
The latest episode of BBC Radio Sussex's Albion Unlimited podcast has landed.Seagulls trio Jack Hinshelwood, Adam Webster and Brajan Gruda all feature on this week's edition and discuss the race for a European spot.Argus journalist Brian Owen also joins to preview Monday's fixture against champions Liverpool.Listen to the full episode on BBC Sounds
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Oliver Glasner raises concerns over his Crystal Palace future as FA Cup winners fight to stay in the Europa League ahead of Community Shield
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Oliver Glasner raises concerns over his Crystal Palace future as FA Cup winners fight to stay in the Europa League ahead of Community Shield

has raised concerns over his Crystal Palace future just a matter of days out from the Premier League season. The Eagles boss has taken the club to new heights since taking over from Roy Hodgson in February 2024, winning the FA Cup last season and taking them into European football - though what competition that will be in remains to be seen. He has since been linked with a number of sides, including Tottenham and Bayern Munich, but has so far stayed put and showed loyalty to the club. But, on the eve of the new season, he has spoken out on his future and expressed his frustration at the lack of movement from the club in the transfer window and likened himself to Marc Guehi. Guehi, who is Palace's captain, has one year left on his contract and continues to be linked to a plethora of clubs, with Liverpool the latest side to express their interest on the back of heavy links to Newcastle last season. Speaking ahead of the Community Shield against Liverpool at Wembley on Sunday, Glasner raised eyebrows when he said: 'Marc and me, we have the same fate.' When asked if his decision over whether he stays at the club could be impacted by what happens in the transfer window, he added: 'We will see.' After leading Palace to Europe for the first time in their history, Glasner was reportedly promised that the club wouldn't make the same mistakes in leaving their business late and thus having a slow start to the season. This summer, though, they are yet to make a first team signing. Instead, focus has been on some of their star men potentially leaving, such as Guehi and Eberechi Eze. 'I said if we want to be better than last year, then it's my advice, "Let's sign at least two players, then we can achieve this",' Glasner said. 'To be competitive in four competitions. If somebody thinks that's nonsense, OK, let's see. 'If Crystal Palace wants to play European football, wants to climb the Premier League table and reproduce the success again, it's just what you have to do. Everybody knows this in the building. 'Of course, it helps if players are in early when you start with pre-season because here you have time to train. We are quite passive. We are short of numbers, we have to add players, especially with quality.' Palace, meanwhile, will learn their European fate on Monday – following their high-stakes hearing in Switzerland. Eagles officials, led by chairman Steve Parish, faced off with UEFA, Nottingham Forest and Lyon in a battle to overturn their bombshell demotion from the Europa League to the Conference League at the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS). Parish has been in Lausanne, Switzerland, where Palace officials pleaded their case on Friday A panel of three senior lawyers will deliver its verdict before close of play on Monday, leaving those involved with a nervous wait over the weekend. 'It was a long day, very involved, very detailed,' Parish, who left slightly early thanks to the birth of a grandson, said. 'It's very hard to say (how it went). 'They listened to both sides but I don't know.' When asked if he was confident, Parish – who described proceedings as 'very civilised' took aim at those involved. 'Given where we are it's hard to be confident because it seems dystopian to even be in this situation,' he said. 'Hopefully good sense will prevail and we'll get to the right answer.'

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F1 simulator, barbers and smart urinals – inside Manchester United's £50m training ground
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Tom Heaton starts chuckling when asked if any of the Manchester United squad have used the new barbers at the club's drastically remodelled training ground. 'Not to throw anyone under the bus but he's over there,' said the United goalkeeper, smiling, as he nodded in the direction of team-mate Diogo Dalot. 'He was first in. He'd have been odds-on favourite to have his hair cut first as well!' Next door to the barbers – where United's players can now invite their hairdressers to cut their locks and which can hardly be missed given the classic blue, red and white rotating pole at its entrance – is a Formula 1 simulator. Defender Ayden Heaven is currently top of the leaderboard with a time of 1:15:721, although Mason Mount evidently has some catching up to do. The England midfielder could only post 1:44:715. 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Welcome to United's revamped Carrington training base, which has undergone a dramatic £50m makeover over the past 12 months that has transformed what co-owner Sir Jim Ratcliffe likened to a 'a gloomy rabbit warren' and a 'hospital in the basement' into an inspiring new environment. When Cristiano Ronaldo walked back through United's doors in 2021, 12 years after leaving Old Trafford for Real Madrid in a then world record £80m move, the five-time World Player of the Year was shocked by what he encountered. 'Nothing had changed,' Ronaldo said. 'Not only the pool – the jacuzzi, even the gym, the kitchen, the chefs, whom I appreciate – lovely people. They stopped in time. It surprised me a lot. 'I thought I would see other things, technologies and infrastructure. Unfortunately, there was a lot of what I used to see at 21, 22 and 23 years old. I haven't seen an evolution at the club. Progress is zero. You have to tear it down and rebuild it.' United have not torn down the old Carrington but they have overhauled it to the extent that Ronaldo may no longer recognise the place. Ratcliffe has never been one to sugar-coat the club's problems and when he first toured Carrington when buying a minority stake from the Glazers, the petrochemicals billionaire quickly came to share Ronaldo's sentiments. 'It was leading edge I am sure in 2000 but 25 years later it wasn't at the level it needed to be for one of the top four or five clubs in the world,' Ratcliffe said at the formal opening of the much changed facility on Friday. 'Downstairs, there weren't many windows on the ground floor. It felt like you were in a hospital in the basement. It was a gloomy rabbit warren. 'It was the first decision when we arrived in the first quarter of 2024 – to invest in this training facility. Now it is open, fresh, modern. It encourages interaction. This is what we needed. 'This is one of the most recognised brands in the world. It stands shoulder to shoulder with Coca-Cola and Apple. The club has to compete at the highest level that is appropriate to the size and history of the club. While a world-class training facility won't take us to that position alone, it is one of the key ingredients. Now we have one.' Touring the facility, the changes smack you in the face. Open spaces with natural light pouring in have replaced the labyrinth of dark, dingy rooms and corridors and a keen emphasis has been placed on 'flows' to ensure that all areas of the training base connect seamlessly and are tailored to the needs of the players and staff. Whereas the main treatment room was previously centred in the middle of the training base and likened to a 'dungeon' by insiders, now it is a vast, airy room with leading technology that looks out on to the first-team training pitches and should provide a more motivational space for players working their way back from injury. 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United's new performance director Sam Erith, who arrived from Manchester City, and the players were all heavily consulted with a number of adaptations and additions made along the way. For example, it took three months to dig down to create the foundations to install a HydroWorx underwater treadmill, which can dramatically aid a player's rehabilitation from injury, that had not been included in the original design but was considered a non-negotiable. There is also one of the largest altitude training chambers in world football that can simulate training at a wide range of altitudes, temperatures and humidities and a specialist hub for United's team of analysts to watch and closely monitor players' workouts. The players' canteen – which houses the barbers and F1 simulator in the far corner – is a vast open area. Food and drink menus are displayed on digital screens outside the kitchens, where United's new performance chef Will Carvalho and his catering team serve up their culinary delights. Lunch on Friday was Italian themed and included gnocchi with basil pesto and salmon puttanesca. Breakfast options featured infused oat porridge, smoothie bowls, baked oats and a selection of pancakes. Chief executive Omar Berrada is sitting in the corner in a meeting with staff when we visit. The players' briefing room, where Amorim and his coaching staff can provide video and tactical analysis, comes complete with plush cream Italian leather seats and giant television. There is also a new 80-seater media auditorium in the facility. By the start of the new year, United expect to have around 500 of their 700-strong staff working out of Carrington, including the majority of senior executives. United's team of analysts work in a large open plan office with rooms at both ends where Amorim and his coaching staff and director of football Jason Wilcox can convene in privacy if needed. The recruitment team is a little further down the corridor. It is a similar set-up for staff on the opposite side. 'Culture, collaboration and performance' are three of the buzzwords United use to describe the new training ground and the centre certainly has an inclusive feel to it while amplifying the feeling of light and space. Heaton moved to United a couple of years after Carrington first opened and admits that the old facility had 'become a little bit clunky' as adaptations were bolted on. 'Walking back through the door having been out for a year, we've all been blown away,' Heaton said. United's first team were forced to train in the women's new £10m facility last season while the redevelopment work was underway. 'Of course it's people that give life to a building and players on the pitch bring performances and results but I think this facility gives us a great foundation,' Heaton added. Dalot, who is still a Portugal team-mate of Ronaldo, joked that he would send the former United striker pictures if he asked. 'I'm sure he would love it if he would be able to see it,' the defender said. Dalot and Heaton are both part of Amorim's new six-strong leadership group and expect the training base to help efforts to improve the culture in the dressing room. Heaton revealed he had already been forced to dish out one 'b---------g'. 'It's not just about delivering a sort of b---------s as you put it – I think it's also about supporting people that need it, trying to make sure we're guiding it and channelling it in the right way,' he added. Dalot agreed. 'I think finally we're getting to a level where this club deserves to be [off the pitch] and now it's up to us to, on the pitch, to match that standard,' he said. 'Ultimately, we're talking about our second home, which is where we spend the most time after our personal homes with our families. So I think you should be able to feel good once you come in. I think these facilities right now are exactly what we thought it would be – and even better.' Amid the 450 job cuts over the last year and raft of changes, United stood accused at times of losing some of their heart and soul but there will be an indelible link to the past every time people enter the reception doors now. Sir Alex Ferguson, the former United manager, was at Friday's opening ceremony to unveil a special plaque in memory of the late Kath Phipps, who was the club's longest serving employee before her death last year. The large plaque describes the beloved former receptionist as 'the welcoming heart of Manchester United for 56 years' and features her popular refrain: 'Work hard and smile, you're at Manchester United.' It is the job of the players now to do just that – and put smiles back on the faces of supporters, starting against Arsenal next Sunday. A building, after all, can only do so much.

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