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‘I’m not doing my job well enough’ – but is Howe now under pressure?

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Ciaran Kelly

Newcastle United reporter at St James’ Park
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The St James’ Park crowd roared in belief.

Newcastle United captain Bruno Guimaraes had just drawn his side level at 2-2 against Brentford with a confident penalty.

But the Magpies were not content with a late equaliser. Sandro Tonali picked the ball out of the net so the game could quickly restart as Guimaraes led the rest of his buoyant team-mates back into their own half.

Was it going to be one of those nights on Tyneside?

Not even close.

It said it all that this fragile side were only level for a few short minutes before Dango Ouattara fired Brentford back in front after capitalising on poor defending.

The team’s body blow was one which left home supporters stunned as Newcastle fell to a damaging 3-2 defeat.

One irate supporter even made his way towards the back of the dugout in the closing stages to urge head coach Eddie Howe to “sort it out” before loud boos rang out at full-time.

Newcastle are now languishing in 12th place in the Premier League – and Howe cut a visibly downbeat figure after the match.

Is he under pressure?

“I always feel under pressure,” the Newcastle head coach said.

One win in eight games in all competitions is the current form.

“The type of pressure is irrelevant to me,” Howe said.

“When you’re in this job, you’re always in that moment, whether it’s pressure to win and keep winning or pressure to turn around results. We’re very much in that feeling.

‘I am not going down that route about the manager’

Howe has endured sticky spells before, of course.

This is a man who took charge of a side in deep relegation trouble in 2021 and only won one of his opening 10 games in all competitions.

There was a humiliating FA Cup exit to Cambridge United along the way on an afternoon when Kieran Trippier made his debut for the club.

Now, more than four years on, Trippier stressed he took “full responsibility” after being caught out in the build-up to all of Brentford’s goals.

“It is nothing about the manager,” Trippier told Sky Sports. “We take responsibility for the performances.

“The manager puts the plan out and we try and execute it. I am not going down that route about the manager. I would never do that.”

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Newcastle operated without a sporting director and missed out on a number of first-choice targets, including Hugo Ekitike, Joao Pedro and James Trafford, in a window when top scorer Alexander Isak went on strike in order to push through a move to Liverpool.

Howe had a huge say on recruitment, but Newcastle ended up spending over £250m on Jacob Ramsey, Anthony Elanga, Malick Thiaw, Yoane Wissa and Nick Woltemade, as well as bringing in goalkeeper Aaron Ramsdale on loan.

It was rather telling that only two recruits – Thiaw and Wissa – started against Brentford.

Wissa had a poked effort cleared off the line, when his side were 1-0 up, but this was another goalless outing for the former Brentford forward.

He left the field to a humiliating chorus of “what a waste of money” from the away end after being substituted.

Wissa has scored just three goals since making his debut in December, while Woltemade has only found the back of the net on one occasion in that same period.

One man who certainly knew where the goal was Alan Shearer, the club’s leading scorer.

Shearer recognised that things are not good enough, but stressed Howe was “not under pressure”.

“The signings in the summer – apart from Malick Thiaw – have not been good enough and hit anything like top form,” said Shearer, who is a pundit on Saturday’s Match of the Day.

“They simply haven’t justified the money that was spent on them as yet and that has hindered Howe.

Howe needs to spark turnaround once more

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Such esteem should not come as a surprise.

This is a manager who ended Newcastle’s seven-decade wait for a major domestic trophy less than a year ago, and who led his side to Champions League qualification in 2025 and 2023.

It is why Howe commanded instant respect from chief executive David Hopkinson and sporting director Ross Wilson when they were finally appointed earlier this season.

The pair have quickly struck up a relationship with Howe, and have repeatedly talked about the importance of alignment behind the scenes at a time when there have been very public ructions at clubs elsewhere.

There has been a degree of an understanding that this side are in transition following a turbulent summer.

There is also a recognition behind the scenes that the incredibly hands-on Howe has not had much training time with his players, and has had to contend with fatigue and injuries during a relentless schedule this season, which is a relatively new phenomenon for Newcastle.

Newcastle have a strong chance of reaching the last 16 of the Champions League, and have an FA Cup fourth-round tie against Aston Villa to come next week, but this season is unravelling. Fast.

No teams have dropped more points from winning positions in the league than Newcastle (19).

Howe’s team have only won three away games in all competitions this season, and have lost three of their last four matches at St James’ Park.

They are as close to the relegation zone as they are the top five.

Such statistics are all the more damning in a week during which Hopkinson doubled down on his assertion that Newcastle would be competing for the biggest prizes by 2030.

Howe certainly needs no reminding that he needs to spark a turnaround sooner rather than later.

“I’ve got to work better, do more and take full responsibility for everything you see on the pitch,” he said.

“I’ve got to work out solutions. That’s for me to do and it’s the same for the players.

“I have to ask them to be really honest with themselves and look at their best level and judge how we are playing against that now in this current moment.

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Wigan sack Lowe after 11 months in charge

Jay Freeman

BBC Sport England

Wigan Athletic have sacked manager Ryan Lowe after 11 months in charge following their 6-1 thrashing by Peterborough United on Saturday.

The dismal defeat dropped the Latics into the relegation zone, with the club having won just once in their past 10 League One fixtures.

They were 11th in the table when they beat Burton on 2 December, but are now 22nd, two points from safety, after 29 matches.

Wigan said Glenn Whelan and Graham Barrow will take charge of the first team on an interim basis while the club “will work quickly to identify and appoint” a new head coach.

The club also thanked Lowe for “his efforts and wishes him all the best for the future”.

Lowe previously won promotion from League Two with Bury and Plymouth and finished 13th, 12th and 10th in the Championship with Preston.

Having arrived at the club at the tail end of the 2024-25 season, Lowe guided Wigan to a 15th-placed finish in the table.

After winning against Northampton on the opening day of this season, Wigan’s form soon tailed off as they secured just three victories from 17 matches in all competitions between late August and late November.

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Real Madrid step up Rodri interest – Sunday’s gossip

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Real Madrid are stepping up interest in Manchester City midfielder Rodri, Arsenal among clubs keen on Leon Goretzka and Manchester United and Newcastle target Michael Kayode.

Real Madrid are stepping up their interest in 29-year-old Manchester City midfielder Rodri, with the Spain international having less than 18 months left on his contract. (Teamtalk)

Arsenal are keen to bring Bayern Munich midfielder Leon Goretzka in on a free transfer in the summer, with the Gunners having reportedly tried to sign the 31-year-old Germany international in January. (Mirror)

Juventus have not held any contract talks with striker Dusan Vlahovic since last summer and, with the Serbia international’s deal running out in the summer, Chelsea, Tottenham, AC Milan, Inter Milan and Roma are interested in the 26-year-old. (Foot Mercato – in French)

Paris St-Germain boss Luis Enrique has been linked with taking over at Manchester United but the Spaniard does not believe it is the right project for him and is set to sign a new contract with the French club. (Mirror)

Manchester United and Newcastle have joined the growing list of clubs tracking Brentford and Italy Under-21 right‑back Michael Kayode, 21. (Teamtalk)

Inter Milan are set to offer manager Cristian Chivu a one-year contract extension, which will run until 2028, and a pay rise at the end of the season. (Corriere dello Sport, via Football Italia)

Argentina forward Paulo Dybala, 32, and Italy attacking midfielder Lorenzo Pellegrini, 29, will have to take pay cuts if they want to stay at Roma, with the contracts of both players running out in the summer. (Gazzetta dello Sport – in Italian)

Italy midfielder Sandro Tonali, 25, could demand a move away from Newcastle if the Magpies fail to qualify for the Champions League next season. (Football Insider)

But Newcastle are also looking at Lyon’s 23-year-old English midfielder Tyler Morton as a possible replacement for Tonali, while Crystal Palace and Nottingham Forest are also interested in the former Liverpool player. (Caughtoffside)

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Akpabio Clarifies Senate’s Position On Electronic Transmission Of Results

The President of the Senate, Godswill Akpabio, has clarified that the Senate did not reject the electronic transmission of election results but merely retained the provision as contained in the 2022 Electoral Act.

Akpabio made the clarification on Saturday in Abuja while speaking at a book launch on the burden of legislators in Nigeria.

He explained that electronic transmission of results remains permissible, but the phrase “real time” was removed from the provision.

Akpabio said, “All we said during discussion was that we should remove the word ‘real-time’ because if you say real-time, then there is a network or grid failure and the network is not working. 
When you go to court, somebody will say it ought to have been real-time. That was all we said.



He emphasised that the decision was taken to grant the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) the flexibility to determine the appropriate mode of result transmission, taking into account technological and security challenges.

The Senate President stressed that the upper chamber would continue to enact legislation that reflects the wishes of the Nigerian people.

Reacting to Akpabio’s position, former Senate President David Mark said the National Assembly should allow INEC to decide whether or not to transmit election results electronically.

He added that the African Democratic Congress (ADC) fully supports the electronic transmission of election results.

READ ALSO: Electoral Act Amendment Bill Passes Third Reading, Senate Retains Existing Provision On Result Transmission

There has been an outrage after the Senate last week passed the Electoral Act 2022 (Repeal and Reenactment) Amendment Bill 2026 through the third reading.

In passing the bill, the upper chamber, however, did not approve the proposed amendment to Clause 60, Subsection 3, of the bill, which sought to make the electronic transmission of election results mandatory.

The rejected provision would have required presiding officers of the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) to electronically transmit results from each polling unit to the IREV portal in real time, after the prescribed Form EC&A had been signed and stamped by the presiding officer and countersigned by candidates.

Is Nigeria’s security situation worsening, or is there progress?

More than 200 people have been killed in attacks, but the abducted Christians have been freed.

Armed groups in Nigeria have killed more than 200 people in several attacks in recent days.

Meanwhile, all the Christian worshippers abducted from churches last month have been released.

How serious is Nigeria’s security situation – and what progress is being made?

Presenter: Adrian Finighan

Guests:

James Barnett – non-resident research fellow at the Hudson Institute, specialising in armed groups in Nigeria

Oluwole Ojewale – regional coordinator for West and Central Africa at the Institute for Security Studies

Nurmagomedov submits Briton Davis with unorthodox choke

Paul Battison

BBC Sport journalist

Usman Nurmagomedov outclassed Alfie Davis before submitting the Briton in the third round to retain his PFL lightweight title in Dubai.

Russia’s Nurmagomedov marched Davis down throughout, attacking with an array of kicks, before securing a key takedown midway through the fight and putting him to sleep with an unorthodox arm triangle choke.

The win extends 27-year-old Nurmagomedov’s unbeaten record to 22 fights and marks his fifth world title defence.

Davis, 33, won the PFL’s lightweight tournament last year to earn the title shot but was a big underdog in the fight and rarely looked as if he would trouble Nurmagomedov.

“I won how I planned, I made him tired, I made him work, I made him grapple and the win was going to come,” said Nurmagomedov.

“Thank you for my father, he is here with me. Everything I have in this life is from him.”

Davis came into the fight following his win over Nurmagomedov’s team-mate Gadzhi Rabadanov in August and he carried the confidence he earned from that contest into the title bout.

Watching Davis at cage-side was two-time heavyweight boxing world champion Anthony Joshua, who was making one of his first public appearances since taking time away from the spotlight after being involved in a car crash in December.

In contrast to Davis, Nurmagomedov wore a stern, focused expression as he made his walkout, flanked by coach, cousin and mentor Khabib Nurmagomedov and two-division UFC champion Islam Makhachev.

Davis embraced the boos from fans as he was introduced before the fight, who chanted ‘Usman Usman’ when the contest got under way.

From the moment the bell rang, Nurmagomedov stalked Davis, attacking with leg and high kicks, while Davis searched for opportunities to counter.

Davis maintained his confidence in the face of Usman’s suffocating presence, jiving and weaving before throwing strikes but failed to land anything of note that hurt the Russian.

Nurmagomedov showed his evasiveness and he dodged a spectacular spinning back-kick from Davis, before proving his advantage in the grappling as he secured multiple takedowns.

Alfie Davis and Usman Nurmagomedov in actionPFL
Usman Nurmagomedov lands a takedown on Alfie DavisPFL

What next for Nurmagomedov and Davis?

In his post-fight interview Nurmagomedov, who is regarded as one of the best fighters outside the UFC, made no mention of possible opponents he would like to face next.

Other than a trilogy fight with Irishman Paul Hughes, who lost on points to Nurmagomedov in two close five-round fights last year, there are no standout contenders.

Another option for Nurmagomedov could be Rabadanov, but it is rare for fighters who train at the same gym to fight each other.

The most enticing fight for Davis next is also Hughes, who has not competed since defeat by Nurmagomedov in October.

Davis will not be able to defend his 2025 tournament crown because the PFL is not continuing the format in 2026.

Earlier on the card, Britain’s Luke Trainer submitted Australia’s Rob Wilkinson in the first round of their light-heavyweight bout via a guillotine choke.

Victory ended a 17-month absence for 29-year-old Trainer as he earned his fifth straight win.

Fellow Briton Haider Khan was on the wrong side of a guillotine choke as he suffered a first-round defeat by Brazil’s Jhony Gregory in their middleweight bout.

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