‘I might have to go back into estate agency’ – losing your job in the WSL

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When Women’s Super League managers are sacked, the clock is ticking to find another job as soon as possible.

With families to look after and few opportunities for full-time jobs in the game, it’s not the easiest thing to do.

“If a Premier League manager loses their job, they are comfortable financially – but we are not,” former Liverpool boss Matt Beard told BBC Sport.

Beard, 47, was sacked at the end of February after four years in his second spell with the club.

He says he needs to get something lined up “by the summer at the latest” in order to provide for his wife and two children, aged 14 and 12.

“I need a plan A and a plan B. I want to stay in football but if I can’t find anything – there are not that many professional teams in England in the women’s game – then I need to look at maybe going back into estate agency work or something like that,” added Beard.

“It would probably be a last resort for me. But at the end of the day I have a family I need to support. I need to look at all options.”

Beard believes losing his job is “part and parcel” of being a football manager and he was supported by the League Managers’ Association (LMA) when he left Liverpool.

But his family moved up to north-west England from London, where the children started new schools, and he is conscious of disrupting things as he contemplates his next steps.

“I want to stay in the game and continue managing. I have my pro licence and degree in business management,” said Beard.

“I think people see me as a fixer who can build something but I know I’m much more than that when I look back at my time as a football manager.

‘Was I owed time? I don’t know’

Beard left Liverpool on strong terms having guided the club to back-to-back WSL titles in 2013 and 2014 during his first spell, before winning the Women’s Championship in 2022 on his return.

He says getting sacked with a year and a half left on his contract was “difficult” but he only has respect for the club and the support they gave him.

“It was going to happen at some point in my career,” said Beard.

“You have to take emotions out of the conversation. I have no qualms with the decision but I still think we would have finished in the top five this season.

“It’s frustrating losing your job. Was I owed time? I don’t know. I have nothing but pride when I look at the journey.

‘It’s everyone else’s problem’

Time away has allowed Beard to reflect on the state of the game and what it was like competing financially with WSL leaders Chelsea.

He says other clubs must find ways to invest and grow simultaneously – but not at the expense of losing their connection with the fanbase.

“I think you’ve seen the game grow so much in such a short space of time. I’m always concerned that we run before we walk,” added Beard.

“I have always been an advocate for the bond we have with the fans. That’s what makes our game unique and I don’t want to see that go.

“I also look at Chelsea and the money they have spent… who can compete with that? They spent more on two players than we did on our entire squad. It’s crazy.

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Commonwealth Games official’s ‘uncomfortable behaviour’ with volunteer

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A “prominent” Commonwealth Games Federation (CGF) official has been found to have breached its ethics code after a claim that they “spent an inordinate amount of time with a volunteer of the opposite sex” at a social event related to CGF business.

In a decision published on the CGF’s website, the chair of an ethics commission panel states that the unnamed individual admitted allegations that they “failed to act with the highest standards of integrity”.

The official – referred to only as ‘AB’ – is also said to have accepted acting “in such a way as to give the appearance of impropriety [and] to have the potential to bring the Commonwealth Games into disrepute”.

What’s the background?

The CGF revealed that in October 2024, a senior CGF figure received a report that ‘AB’ “may not have acted with the appropriate level of ethical conduct whilst performing a CGF related role”.

AB is described as “prominent in the Commonwealth Games Federation”.

An investigation was then conducted by an unnamed London-based lawyer, referred to in the published decision as ‘CD’, who acted as an ethics officer in the case, and charged the official in February.

Their report “included a summary and analysis of a first-person witness to the alleged unethical conduct”.

“The report documents that AB, while at a social event related to CGF business, spent an inordinate amount of time with a volunteer of the opposite sex,” the CGF added.

“The first-person witnesses were uncomfortable with AB’s behaviour…It is clear these witnesses had concerns about the potential to bring the CGF and/or CGF Officials into disrepute, to the extent that they took photographs of AB with the volunteer.”

The ethics commission chair noted that the official insisted “nothing inappropriate happened at the event”, and “states that they have agreed to the allegations and acceded to the proposed sanction to allow the Ethics Commission to hear the matter with a chair as a single person panel”.

However, the chair also concluded that “the evidence before me indicates that AB’s actions denigrated the perception of the integrity, of the potential for the appearance of impropriety, and the possibility of bringing the image of the Commonwealth Games into disrepute”.

‘Highly inappropriate’

In an intriguing twist, the panel chair also claimed that the official suggested to the lawyer that they “should mitigate the sanctions” and that the lawyer acted inappropriately by proposing modified sanctions after the charges were initially delivered, giving the official “opinions or advice that goes well beyond the Ethics Officer role of providing information”.

“I have further determined that CD has, in effect, conducted what would be characterised as plea bargaining with AB, after AB had received the Notice of Charge” said the chair. “I find this to be highly inappropriate.

“CD should not have made any modifications to the charges or the sanctions, as that is in the sole purview of the Ethic Commission at a hearing, and only after a hearing is requested by the covered person.”

‘Reputational risk’

The chair also revealed that they rejected a suggestion by the reprimanded official to not publicly disclose the outcome of the case, stating that “not disclosing the decision could create a reputational risk for the CGF and possibly subject it to allegations of cover up.”

However, the chair said that they have chosen not to reveal the individual’s identity because based on the investigation, “no harm was done to any person, there does not appear to be any risk of harm towards any person or persons”.

They also noted that “AB is not the subject of a provisional or sanctioned suspension or expulsion where their identity must be provided in order to ensure compliance; and that the sanctions proposed by CD and accepted by AB are on the less severe end of sanctions spectrum”.

It is also noted that the decision “shall be posted on the Commonwealth Games Website under the relevant section concerning the Ethics Commission, and shall not be posted on the ‘News’ feed. The decision will be posted for a period of 28 days only”.

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Commonwealth Games official’s ‘uncomfortable behaviour’ with volunteer

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A “prominent” Commonwealth Games Federation (CGF) official has been found to have breached its ethics code after a claim that they “spent an inordinate amount of time with a volunteer of the opposite sex” at a social event related to CGF business.

In a decision published on the CGF’s website, the chair of an ethics commission panel states that the unnamed individual admitted allegations that they “failed to act with the highest standards of integrity”.

The official – referred to only as ‘AB’ – is also said to have accepted acting “in such a way as to give the appearance of impropriety [and] to have the potential to bring the Commonwealth Games into disrepute”.

What’s the background?

The CGF revealed that in October 2024, a senior CGF figure received a report that ‘AB’ “may not have acted with the appropriate level of ethical conduct whilst performing a CGF related role”.

AB is described as “prominent in the Commonwealth Games Federation”.

An investigation was then conducted by an unnamed London-based lawyer, referred to in the published decision as ‘CD’, who acted as an ethics officer in the case, and charged the official in February.

Their report “included a summary and analysis of a first-person witness to the alleged unethical conduct”.

“The report documents that AB, while at a social event related to CGF business, spent an inordinate amount of time with a volunteer of the opposite sex,” the CGF added.

“The first-person witnesses were uncomfortable with AB’s behaviour…It is clear these witnesses had concerns about the potential to bring the CGF and/or CGF Officials into disrepute, to the extent that they took photographs of AB with the volunteer.”

The ethics commission chair noted that the official insisted “nothing inappropriate happened at the event”, and “states that they have agreed to the allegations and acceded to the proposed sanction to allow the Ethics Commission to hear the matter with a chair as a single person panel”.

However, the chair also concluded that “the evidence before me indicates that AB’s actions denigrated the perception of the integrity, of the potential for the appearance of impropriety, and the possibility of bringing the image of the Commonwealth Games into disrepute”.

‘Highly inappropriate’

In an intriguing twist, the panel chair also claimed that the official suggested to the lawyer that they “should mitigate the sanctions” and that the lawyer acted inappropriately by proposing modified sanctions after the charges were initially delivered, giving the official “opinions or advice that goes well beyond the Ethics Officer role of providing information”.

“I have further determined that CD has, in effect, conducted what would be characterised as plea bargaining with AB, after AB had received the Notice of Charge” said the chair. “I find this to be highly inappropriate.

“CD should not have made any modifications to the charges or the sanctions, as that is in the sole purview of the Ethic Commission at a hearing, and only after a hearing is requested by the covered person.”

‘Reputational risk’

The chair also revealed that they rejected a suggestion by the reprimanded official to not publicly disclose the outcome of the case, stating that “not disclosing the decision could create a reputational risk for the CGF and possibly subject it to allegations of cover up.”

However, the chair said that they have chosen not to reveal the individual’s identity because based on the investigation, “no harm was done to any person, there does not appear to be any risk of harm towards any person or persons”.

They also noted that “AB is not the subject of a provisional or sanctioned suspension or expulsion where their identity must be provided in order to ensure compliance; and that the sanctions proposed by CD and accepted by AB are on the less severe end of sanctions spectrum”.

It is also noted that the decision “shall be posted on the Commonwealth Games Website under the relevant section concerning the Ethics Commission, and shall not be posted on the ‘News’ feed. The decision will be posted for a period of 28 days only”.

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  • Commonwealth Games

‘He was immense’ – Rice lauded as ‘one of the best on the planet’

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It was a performance that could prove to be career defining.

Declan Rice cost Arsenal £105m, has played in two European Championship finals with England and won a European trophy at former club West Ham.

Yet it feels the Arsenal midfielder has truly announced himself on the world stage over these two legs in the Champions League quarter-final against Real Madrid.

No matter how good a player may be, how obvious the quality, it can require a special performance in the biggest of games for people to really take notice.

If they still weren’t paying attention after his two stunning free-kicks at the Emirates last week, there could be no ignoring Rice’s brilliance at the Bernabeu as his side won the return leg 2-1 to book a semi-final meeting with Paris St-Germain.

“He turned the game around,” Arsenal boss Mikel Arteta told TNT Sports. “He was immense, he made a difference.”

There had been some concerns the second leg may turn into a nervy evening for Arsenal, despite their three-goal advantage from the home tie, but Rice was having none of it.

The England man, 26, was everywhere, stepping in to stop Madrid’s star-studded attack one minute, driving Arsenal forward in attack the next.

If any of his team-mates shared some of the fans’ pre-match apprehension, they need only have looked at the manner in which the 26-year-old – who joined the Gunners in 2023 – assumed control for the reassurance they needed to put out the holders.

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The night, though, could have turned out very differently for Rice after he was adjudged to have pulled down Kylian Mbappe in the penalty area with the game goalless, earning him a booking too that would have ruled him out of the first leg of the semi-final.

However, the decision was overturned by a video assistant referee (VAR) intervention and, rather the scare negatively affect him, Rice gave a thumbs-up to the referee and continued as if it had never happened.

“What a two games to cement yourself as one of the best midfielders on the planet,” ex-Arsenal centre-back Matthew Upson said on BBC Radio 5 Live.

“Declan Rice is doing it in these two games.”

Former England defender Rio Ferdinand added on TNT Sports: “You need games like this in your career. You need to get to places like this to be properly judged.

“He’s stood up against the holders of this trophy and he’s not just competed, he’s run the show, he’s run the show in both games. He’s put himself in another bracket.”

Rice’s five interceptions over the two legs were the most of any player involved, while he also had the joint-most shots on target (four).

He has seven goals across all competitions this season, matching his previous best in a single campaign.

Any list of the world’s most complete midfielders must now include Rice and he has fully deserved the plaudits.

“It is such a special night for this club, a historic night for this club. We had an objective in this competition – we want to win this competition,” he told TNT Sports.

Achieve that objective and this performance might come to be remembered in the same way as Roy Keane in Turin – when the Irishman’s inspired display helped Manchester United to a comeback win over Juventus to reach the 1999 Champions League final. Or Steven Gerrard’s heroic efforts when Liverpool fought back from 3-0 down to beat AC Milan on penalties to lift the 2005 trophy in Istanbul.

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‘He was immense’ – Rice lauded as ‘one of the best on the planet’

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  • 530 Comments

It was a performance that could prove to be career defining.

Declan Rice cost Arsenal £105m, has played in two European Championship finals with England and won a European trophy at former club West Ham.

Yet it feels the Arsenal midfielder has truly announced himself on the world stage over these two legs in the Champions League quarter-final against Real Madrid.

No matter how good a player may be, how obvious the quality, it can require a special performance in the biggest of games for people to really take notice.

If they still weren’t paying attention after his two stunning free-kicks at the Emirates last week, there could be no ignoring Rice’s brilliance at the Bernabeu as his side won the return leg 2-1 to book a semi-final meeting with Paris St-Germain.

“He turned the game around,” Arsenal boss Mikel Arteta told TNT Sports. “He was immense, he made a difference.”

There had been some concerns the second leg may turn into a nervy evening for Arsenal, despite their three-goal advantage from the home tie, but Rice was having none of it.

The England man, 26, was everywhere, stepping in to stop Madrid’s star-studded attack one minute, driving Arsenal forward in attack the next.

If any of his team-mates shared some of the fans’ pre-match apprehension, they need only have looked at the manner in which the 26-year-old – who joined the Gunners in 2023 – assumed control for the reassurance they needed to put out the holders.

This video can not be played

To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.

The night, though, could have turned out very differently for Rice after he was adjudged to have pulled down Kylian Mbappe in the penalty area with the game goalless, earning him a booking too that would have ruled him out of the first leg of the semi-final.

However, the decision was overturned by a video assistant referee (VAR) intervention and, rather the scare negatively affect him, Rice gave a thumbs-up to the referee and continued as if it had never happened.

“What a two games to cement yourself as one of the best midfielders on the planet,” ex-Arsenal centre-back Matthew Upson said on BBC Radio 5 Live.

“Declan Rice is doing it in these two games.”

Former England defender Rio Ferdinand added on TNT Sports: “You need games like this in your career. You need to get to places like this to be properly judged.

“He’s stood up against the holders of this trophy and he’s not just competed, he’s run the show, he’s run the show in both games. He’s put himself in another bracket.”

Rice’s five interceptions over the two legs were the most of any player involved, while he also had the joint-most shots on target (four).

He has seven goals across all competitions this season, matching his previous best in a single campaign.

Any list of the world’s most complete midfielders must now include Rice and he has fully deserved the plaudits.

“It is such a special night for this club, a historic night for this club. We had an objective in this competition – we want to win this competition,” he told TNT Sports.

Achieve that objective and this performance might come to be remembered in the same way as Roy Keane in Turin – when the Irishman’s inspired display helped Manchester United to a comeback win over Juventus to reach the 1999 Champions League final. Or Steven Gerrard’s heroic efforts when Liverpool fought back from 3-0 down to beat AC Milan on penalties to lift the 2005 trophy in Istanbul.

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‘The message will be clear – it’s time for Ancelotti to move on’

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In the build-up to Wednesday’s night Champions League quarter-final tie at the Bernabeu against Arsenal, it felt like there was only one word on every Real Madrid fan’s mind – remontada.

That is Spanish for comeback, and while Real Madrid sides of the past have produced stirring fightbacks from difficult positions to triumph, that never looked likely with this current team.

Real were 3-0 down from a disappointing first-leg display at Emirates Stadium but, bar a brief moment of belief when Vinicius Jr cancelled out Bukayo Saka’s second-half opener within two minutes, the holders never threatened to overturn the deficit.

It was Arsenal instead who fashioned a success to become the only side to win their first two games against Real at the Bernabeu. Gabriel Martinelli struck in stoppage time to secure a stunning 2-1 victory and 5-1 success on aggregate.

The post-mortem has already begun and, as Real Madrid face up the prospect of not being in the Champions League semi-finals for just the third time in 12 seasons, Carlo Ancelotti knows the questions about him and his players won’t be going away anytime soon.

“We have the dark side and we have the bright side,” said the Italian, who took charge of Real for a second spell in 2021 and has won the Champions League three times with the club.

“We have managed the bright side many times, we have won titles, we have won games. We have been eliminated [from the Champions League but] we have three more competitions we need to stay focused for.”

Spanish football expert Guillem Balague added: “Real Madrid stand at the crossroads. They have a squad in need of refreshing.

The end of the Ancelotti era?

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It wasn’t supposed to be this way.

When the Spanish giants signed Kylian Mbappe in the summer after his contract expired at Paris St-Germain, a lot of people were wondering how this Madrid team full of superstars could be stopped. Many pundits suggested they couldn’t.

But after losing their European crown following the limp exit to Arsenal and facing a big fight to defend their La Liga title with Barcelona four points clear in top spot, Real’s season is already being seen as a failure.

“This Real Madrid team is not at the level that these supporters expect,” former Arsenal defender Matthew Upson told BBC Radio 5 live.

“That’s why I wouldn’t be surprised if there were some changes at some point.”

Ancelotti’s future has been a subject of discussion in Spain for the majority of the season.

The 65-year-old has won 11 trophies in his second stint, including two league titles, two Champions Leagues and the Fifa Club World Cup.

Ancelotti is contracted until 2026 and – linked with the vacant Brazil job – has previously said he will discuss his future in the summer.

Asked if he would still be in charge by the time the Club World Cup begins in June, Ancelotti said: “I can’t speak about this right now.

“It could be that the club decide to change [coach]. It could be this year – or the next when my contract expires, there’s no problem.

“It could be tomorrow, in 10 days, in a month or a year, but all I can do will be to thank the club – if my contract’s up or not, I don’t care.”

Ancelotti’s managerial record is impressive and deserves respect, having won 20 major trophies, including five Champions Leagues, with two of them at AC Milan.

But, with Bayer Leverkusen boss and former Real Madrid midfielder Xabi Alonso linked with a return, the club’s hierarchy could decide now is the time to make the change.

“He won’t be there next season,” French football journalist Julien Laurens said on BBC Match of the Day.

“This was an embarrassment for Real Madrid. To lose 5-1 against a very good Arsenal team, but you still are the reigning champions and have some of the best players in the world.”

Balague added: “Ancelotti thrives in environments with quality players who don’t need to be over-coached.

“His job, in many ways, has been to keep the dressing room harmonious, egos balanced, and the belief high that Real Madrid can win any game, simply because they are Real Madrid. And that worked, to a point.

“But this season has highlighted the limits of that approach. Madrid have run less than their opponents in key games, while the second tier of talent – Arda Guler, Brahim Díaz and even Endrick when available – have been underused.

How do Real Madrid rebuild?

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Many would argue the summer dismissal of Ancelotti would be an overreaction.

After all, the Spaniards are still in with a shout of defending their La Liga title and have a Copa Del Rey final looming against Barcelona.

But after winning a 15th Champions League and La Liga last season, there’s no hiding the fact this one has been disappointing so far.

They have lost 11 games in all competitions, while their performance in both legs against Arsenal were alarming.

They were a distant second best in the first leg and, while their fans did their part in the return with plenty of noise at the Bernabeu, the players failed to do theirs.

Real did not manage a shot on target until 10 minutes into the second half, while their leveller came about after an uncharacteristic mistake by William Saliba.

“There was no plan tactically, it was an absolute mess,” Laurens added.

“They have to change, they have to change their policy and their manager.”

Balague admitted: “The warning signs have been there for months.

“Their Champions League elimination at the hands of Arsenal feels like a reckoning, the culmination of a season where, despite results, things have often looked off.

“Every match has been a grind. This Real Madrid side has looked like a team running on fumes.”

Change has already started for next season.

Trent Alexander-Arnold looks set to arrive from Liverpool in the summer, while there could be some high-profile exits to follow.

“They need to make big calls now,” said Laurens. “Do you keep Vinicius Jr? What do you do with Rodrygo. It just cannot continue because that front four cannot work together.”

Balague also believed the squad needed a significant refresh to get the club back to where they want to be.

He said: “This is a squad that needs new energy. Toni Kroos has never truly been replaced, the midfield lacks control. While Luka Modric remains a legend, the need for someone who can control the tempo without being 39 years old is obvious.

“The club has to face hard decisions this summer. Modric and Lucas Vázquez [contracts] may not be renewed. David Alaba, if a good offer comes in, could be allowed to leave.”

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