
The best year of my life – Craig Bellamy relishing unbeaten start as Wales boss
The Group J qualifier at the King Baudouin Stadium will be the final fixture of Bellamy's first 12 months in the job after his appointment last summer.
Craig Bellamy pictured at a Wales training session ahead of the World Cup qualifier against Belgium (David Davies/PA)
'It would be a huge push (to win for qualification). But whatever it will be, it rolls on if we get beat,' said Bellamy.
'But it's going to happen. Do I live in fear of it? Not at all. I don't live that way.
'I've had so many setbacks in my life, it's OK. I'm still here. And I've actually just had the best year of my life. This has been the best.
'How did I get that at 45? It's what I've been waiting for but, at the same time, it's like I don't know what's around the corner. I don't.
'But I know what I'm going to do. Enjoy everything. The good, the bad, whatever it is.
'Maybe I look too deep into stuff or maybe not. I try not to. But we're here for a tiny, short time.'
Group leaders Wales are six points clear of Belgium after beating Liechtenstein 3-0 on Friday.
The Dragons have taken seven points from their first three qualifiers, while Belgium began their campaign with a 1-1 draw in North Macedonia on Friday.
That six-point gap has put early pressure on Belgium, who have won only one of their last eight games and are under new management in former Napoli and Lyon boss Rudi Garcia.
Bellamy, however, has played down what protecting Wales' unbeaten record against Belgium – eighth on the FIFA world rankings – would mean to him.
Gweithio'n galed am Gwlad Belg 💪 pic.twitter.com/lOoZrZGYdD
— Wales 🏴 (@Cymru) June 8, 2025
'It's always nice, but I don't live waking up every morning thinking like, 'oh, please, don't lose this',' said Bellamy.
'No. Play well. We've done everything we could. That's the honest truth.
'This week's been top. And it's been top since I've just loved every moment because they train, they work, they show up, and to have that is amazing.
'I don't to have say, 'that wasn't good enough, no, we need to be sharper'. Never once I had to. So they give you energy.'
Wales are again without Leeds winger Daniel James, who has failed to recover from illness after missing the Liechtenstein win.
Daniel James again misses out for Wales in Belgium through illness (David Davies/PA)
Nottingham Forest full-back Neco Williams also misses out after rolling his ankle against Liechtenstein.
Bellamy said: 'Dan just couldn't recover from his illness. It knocked him back a bit. It's a shame but it's OK.
'We'd love Neco, we'd have loved everyone, but we don't have them.'
'I've never once moaned about it before and I'm not going to start now. We have good enough players.
'Of course we'd like them but they're not going to be here. Let's make sure they're in a good position for when they come back.'
Cardiff defender Dylan Lawlor has been called in as cover for Williams.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Glasgow Times
an hour ago
- Glasgow Times
Carlos Alcaraz v Jannik Sinner thriller joins list of classic men's finals
Here, the PA news agency looks at five other memorable men's singles finals. Roger Federer v Rafael Nadal (Wimbledon final 2008) Spain's Rafael Nadal celebrates his victory over Switzerland's Roger Federer (Sean Dempsey/PA) Nadal came out on top 6–4 6–4 6–7(5) 6–7(8) 9–7 as two tennis greats went head-to-head in a final lasting almost five hours. Spaniard Nadal stormed into a two-set lead but Federer battled back with two tie-break victories. Rain delays played a part in building tension for a deciding set which Nadal edged 9–7 to claim his maiden Wimbledon title. Bjorn Borg v John McEnroe – Wimbledon final 1980 Federer's clash with Nadal was championed as the greatest final since Borg beat McEnroe in 1980. In just under four hours, four-time champion Borg beat brash young New Yorker McEnroe 1-6 7-5 6-3 6-7 (16) 8-6. McEnroe would not go away, saving seven championship points during the match, but Borg eventually saw it through. Novak Djokovic vs. Rafael Nadal (Australian Open final 2012) Djokovic claimed his third Australian Open title with a 5–7 6–4 6–2 6–7 7–5 triumph over Nadal in the longest final of the Open era. The five-hour 53-minute contest between the two top-ranked players at the time, beat the record set in the 1988 US Open final. The final set saw the two deadlocked at 4-4 before a Djokovic break of serve allowed the match to conclude in the early hours in Melbourne. Novak Djokovic vs. Roger Federer (Wimbledon final 2019) Novak Djokovic and Roger Federer (left) shake hands after the mens singles final on day thirteen of the Wimbledon (Victoria Jones/PA) Federer was beaten in the last major final of his career as world number one Djokovic toppled the second seed 7-6 1-6 7-6 4-6 13-12 in another near five-hour affair. The Serbian eventually claimed the deciding set in what is the longest Wimbledon final in history. Andy Murray vs Roger Federer (London 2012 Olympics final) Andy Murray put his Wimbledon final defeat to Federer a month earlier behind him, gaining revenge with a 6–2 6–1 6–4 victory to claim Olympic Gold. A home crowd roared Murray on to Team GB's first medal in the event since 1908 in a contest which sticks in the memory for the emotion of Murray's display and undoubted quality as he got past the then world number one.

South Wales Argus
an hour ago
- South Wales Argus
Carlos Alcaraz v Jannik Sinner thriller joins list of classic men's finals
Here, the PA news agency looks at five other memorable men's singles finals. Roger Federer v Rafael Nadal (Wimbledon final 2008) Spain's Rafael Nadal celebrates his victory over Switzerland's Roger Federer (Sean Dempsey/PA) Nadal came out on top 6–4 6–4 6–7(5) 6–7(8) 9–7 as two tennis greats went head-to-head in a final lasting almost five hours. Spaniard Nadal stormed into a two-set lead but Federer battled back with two tie-break victories. Rain delays played a part in building tension for a deciding set which Nadal edged 9–7 to claim his maiden Wimbledon title. Bjorn Borg v John McEnroe – Wimbledon final 1980 Federer's clash with Nadal was championed as the greatest final since Borg beat McEnroe in 1980. In just under four hours, four-time champion Borg beat brash young New Yorker McEnroe 1-6 7-5 6-3 6-7 (16) 8-6. McEnroe would not go away, saving seven championship points during the match, but Borg eventually saw it through. Novak Djokovic vs. Rafael Nadal (Australian Open final 2012) Djokovic claimed his third Australian Open title with a 5–7 6–4 6–2 6–7 7–5 triumph over Nadal in the longest final of the Open era. The five-hour 53-minute contest between the two top-ranked players at the time, beat the record set in the 1988 US Open final. The final set saw the two deadlocked at 4-4 before a Djokovic break of serve allowed the match to conclude in the early hours in Melbourne. Novak Djokovic vs. Roger Federer (Wimbledon final 2019) Novak Djokovic and Roger Federer (left) shake hands after the mens singles final on day thirteen of the Wimbledon (Victoria Jones/PA) Federer was beaten in the last major final of his career as world number one Djokovic toppled the second seed 7-6 1-6 7-6 4-6 13-12 in another near five-hour affair. The Serbian eventually claimed the deciding set in what is the longest Wimbledon final in history. Andy Murray vs Roger Federer (London 2012 Olympics final) Andy Murray put his Wimbledon final defeat to Federer a month earlier behind him, gaining revenge with a 6–2 6–1 6–4 victory to claim Olympic Gold. A home crowd roared Murray on to Team GB's first medal in the event since 1908 in a contest which sticks in the memory for the emotion of Murray's display and undoubted quality as he got past the then world number one.


Scottish Sun
an hour ago
- Scottish Sun
Scotland boss Steve Clarke says he's ‘suited to getting all the stick' and not being loved ‘doesn't bother him'
Clarke also opened up on replacing a major departure in his Scotland set-up STE ABOUT THAT Scotland boss Steve Clarke says he's 'suited to getting all the stick' and not being loved 'doesn't bother him' Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) STEVE CLARKE isn't feeling much love from the Tartan Army these days. But the Scotland boss insists he has never been the type to bother too much about popularity contests. Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up 4 Steve Clarke says he doesn't mind getting stick from supporters Credit: Kenny Ramsay 4 Clarke's Scotland side went down 3-1 to Iceland at Hampden on Friday Credit: Reuters 4 The boss says he's grateful for the chance to put things right against Liechtenstein Credit: PA Gaffer Steve Clarke has spent the weekend poring over the 3-1 defeat to Iceland that saw Scotland make it ten home friendlies without a win. With the vital World Cup qualifiers looming in September, punters are fast losing faith that the national team have any chance of reaching the finals. Clarke admits his side are 'fortunate' to have the chance to rectify Friday's performance so quickly when they face Liechtenstein tomorrow night. But he is willing to take the flak and has full faith Scotland can put things right before the competitive action finally kicks off again. Clarke said: 'As fast as the game goes, you have to recover. Football's never smooth. 'We're fortunate we have a game to put things right. 'I try to be very measured in my approach to football and I try to be very measured in my approach to life. 'I've done alright. I'm over 60 now. I'm still involved in the game. 'So I must have a fair idea of how to deal with the disappointments and how to deal with the highs as well because football, and especially club football, can be week to week — one minute up then one minute down. 'It's a little bit like that in international football but it's more spread out and you have to learn how to deal with it. Scotland fans need to STOP booing Steve Clarke and his players says Kris Boyd 'I think my character is quite suited to being the guy that gets all the stick. 'Everybody likes to be loved, but I'm very good at not going on social media. 'You get a general feel for what's happening in the world of football, but that doesn't bother me too much.' Clarke will end the season by saying goodbye to trusted No 2 John Carver over in Liechtenstein. The friendly in Vaduz is set to be 60-year-old Carver's last in the Scotland coaching set-up after five years alongside Clarke. The Geordie has pledged his future to Polish side Lechia Gdansk, who he's just saved from relegation in Poland's top league — a feat that saw him nominated for the Ekstraklasa Coach of the Season Award. Clarke was reluctant to go into detail about it — but says he has 'lots' of candidates as a potential replacement to work alongside Alan Irvine and goalie coach Chris Woods. Clarke said: 'It will possibly be John's last game with us. We'll decide. 'Me and John will have a good chat after the game and we'll decide what happens going forward. 'If he were to leave us I have lots of people in mind to come in. 4 John Carver is set to leave his role as Clarke's no.2 Credit: Kenny Ramsay 'I'd rather not talk about it now because we just want to concentrate on the game we have in Liechtenstein. We'll talk about it after that.' The sloppiness of the goals Scotland are losing are a concern — but he exonerated rookie keeper Cieran Slicker from blame for the Iceland opener. He admitted: 'I think we could have defended set plays a little bit better. 'We've been fantastic with set-plays but if you look at the goals we conceded on Friday they didn't do what we've been doing over the last four or five years — since Austin MacPhee came in and set us a way of defending set plays. 'The first one comes from a clearance on Cieran's weaker foot that doesn't quite clear the boy in midfield. 'When the ball comes back, we allow the striker to turn and shoot, and nobody was saving that shot because it was a great finish. That's just the way it is. 'The second goal was a ball into the box that we simply didn't deal with inside the six-yard box. 'If you say that Scotland will touch the ball four or five times without any Iceland players touching the ball and it ends up in the back of the net, that has to be a disappointment. 'And at the third goal, the line didn't drop properly and it didn't drop cohesively. 'Those are things that we've always worked on and normally we're very good at, so that was disappointing. 'We've been fantastic at defending set plays for a number of years. They're just 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 per cent down on their concentration, on their application of what we ask them to do. 'And when that happens it shows you can be punished. Scott McTominay's career Born in Lancaster on December 8, 1996 Joined the Manchester United youth system aged five and signed his first professional contract in 2013 Made his Premier League debut against Arsenal in May 2017 McTominay went on to win Carabao Cup and FA Cup with Man Utd Made 255 appearances and scored 29 goals for the Red Devils McTominay joined Napoli in August for £25.7million Born in England, he qualified for Scotland through his dad who's from Helensburgh McTominay was called-up by Scotland in March 2018 and has gone on to become a huge Hampden favourite He was part of the squad at Euro 2020 and Euro 2024 He won his 50th cap while playing against Germany at Euro 2024 McTominay has scored some huge goals for Scotland, including an injury-time winner against Israel and his famous double in the 2-0 win over Spain in Glasgow 'It's very difficult for me to tell because I can't get inside their heads. 'Obviously we've touched on what happened with Cieran. 'Listen, everybody makes a big thing about Cieran. But if you play a young goalkeeper, there's a chance he'll make mistakes. 'I've already touched on the fact that defensively we should have dealt with the two set plays much better than we did. 'Cieran's a good goalkeeper. He trains well, he works well in the camp when he's in. He's just had an unfortunate night. 'He'll bounce back from it, and he'll do well at his club. 'He needs to play more regular games and he obviously knows that. But he's got a big future in front of him.' Scott McTominay and Kieran Tierney weren't on the SFA charter which eventually touched down at Friedrichshafen Airport in Germany last night, an hour north of Vaduz. The travelling party's departure from Scotland was delayed by the late arrival of their aircraft. Clarke said: 'Scott and Kieran both came into this camp carrying some little issues from the season. 'I think if we'd had a longer turnaround between the Iceland and Liechtenstein games they might have had a chance, but this is the end of season for those two. 'The most important thing is to have a good rest over the summer and come back flying in the autumn.' Now Ipswich frontman George Hirst could get another run-out tonight. Clarke added: 'He caught my eye. He had a chance with a header that was probably just too high for him. 'He had a good shot that the goalkeeper made a fantastic save from in the first half. 'He had a good header that the goalkeeper made a fantastic save from in the second half. 'He was on the spot for the tap-in off the goalkeeper was just offside. 'Then Lennon Miller was another who went on and did OK as well.' Keep up to date with ALL the latest news and transfers at the Scottish Sun football page