Archive November 9, 2025

Man City make ominous statement on chastening night for Liverpool

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Manchester City delivered a deafening statement of intent to celebrate Pep Guardiola’s landmark 1,000th match in management as Liverpool were dismissed out of hand at Etihad Stadium.

City’s 3-0 win carried an ominous warning for Premier League leaders Arsenal, whose advantage at the top was cut to four points, while it inflicted a grievous wound on Liverpool and their hopes of back-to-back titles.

Guardiola had to navigate City through troubled waters last season as their historic run of four successive titles ended, with questions raised about the 54-year-old Spaniard’s ability to rebuild.

After years of almost unbroken success with Barcelona, Bayern Munich and City, was Guardiola still eager enough to create another team of champions?

This was the most emphatic answer from Guardiola and his players, a performance that was at once dazzling, dangerous and full of the power and tempo that suggests City are very much back in shape to challenge for the Premier League trophy.

If Guardiola had asked for a gift from City’s players to commemorate their inspirational manager on his big day, this was the perfect present.

Guardiola saw it that way, as he said: “I just want to say thank you to the players, backroom staff to give me that present. I’m proud to do it here in Manchester with my City.”

The spectacle would have been the opposite of celebratory for Arsenal and, very painfully here, Liverpool.

Arsenal are still in pole position, but this is only after 11 games and City have proved in the past they enjoy making opponents feel their breath on their shoulders.

After Arsenal dropped two points late on at Sunderland on Saturday, the door was suddenly ajar. City burst through in spectacular fashion.

For Liverpool, this was a sobering, chastening experience.

It was here at Etihad Stadium last February that Liverpool’s 2-0 win completed the double over Manchester City, also effectively settling the Premier League title chase.

This game, both in result and performance, was a complete contrast. Liverpool were overrun by a revitalised City.

It is not a defeat that ends their hopes of keeping hold of their crown – we are only 11 games into the season, after all.

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‘A brutal lesson for Liverpool’

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City preyed on Liverpool’s vulnerable midfield and defence throughout, as others have done this season.

Slot was unhappy that Virgil van Dijk’s header, which would have made it 1-1 before half-time, was disallowed for offside.

Defender Andy Robertson, who was certainly in an offside position, ducked in front of City goalkeeper Gianluigi Donnarumma to allow the ball to drift in. Many felt Robertson’s presence was inconsequential and that the goal should have stood, but ultimately the Reds were given a brutal lesson.

Once Nico Gonzalez’s deflected shot made it 2-0 seconds before half-time, the contest was effectively over.

Guardiola seems re-energised by the task of putting City right after a poor campaign by their standards last time out, assembling a range of attacking weapons capable of winning any game, led by the remarkable spearhead of Haaland.

The first goal on Sunday was rich in the creativity that is Guardiola’s hallmark, a magical moment that was a fitting way to mark his big day. It was a masterpiece that will live long in the memory.

City weaved their way out from facing Liverpool pressure near a corner flag at their own end of the pitch with a glorious sequence of passes from back to front.

This symphony of Guardiola’s style ended in a familiar crescendo as Haaland soared above Liverpool defender Ibrahima Konate to meet Matheus Nunes’ cross, time almost standing still as the header dropped beyond keeper Giorgi Mamardashvili.

Nunes’ cross that set up Haaland’s header was the 19th pass in the move that simply cut through Liverpool until it reached its final flourish.

It could be used as a monument to Guardiola’s footballing philosophy.

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Doku is a transformative symbol of this new City.

The 23-year-old has gone from being an unquestionably talented winger, but sometimes maddeningly inconsistent, to the brilliant catalyst behind so much of their best moments this season.

He gave Conor Bradley, outstanding in Liverpool’s win against Real Madrid in the Champions League, a horrible time. Bradley was run ragged by the pace and physical presence of Doku – although surely no-one could cope with the Belgian in this form.

Doku was simply unstoppable, a player now in full flower after finally becoming accustomed to Guardiola’s high demands following a £55.4m move from Rennes in August 2023.

Rayan Cherki adds subtlety in midfield, while Phil Foden is back to his best and Bernardo Silva still has all the old guile to keep City moving with his prompting.

It was a resounding win in every way, giving Arsenal and their manager Mikel Arteta – formerly Guardiola’s assistant – a hefty helping of food for thought over the international break.

For Liverpool, this was a return to earth with a resounding thud after their recent upturn.

They now languish in eighth place, eight points behind Arsenal and four adrift of City, but with momentum stalled. Liverpool’s tally of five defeats this season now eclipses the four they suffered when they won the title.

And there are still disturbing signs that Liverpool have yet to adapt to the summer influx of almost £450m worth of new talent.

Hugo Ekitike, one of the successes, was subdued here while £125m fellow striker Alexander Isak was an unused substitute after three weeks out with a groin injury.

It was another day of suffering and disappointment for £116m playmaker Florian Wirtz, whose struggles were made worse by the taunts of Manchester City’s fans, remembering how he turned down a move to Etihad Stadium in order to join Liverpool from Bayer Leverkusen.

Wirtz, at this stage, clearly struggles with the physicality of the Premier League. The talent is clearly there, but too often he is shrugged off easily in possession.

It is something he will have to get used to and counter-act. Inevitable barracking came Wirtz’s way with a chant of “What a waste of money” from jubilant home fans when he was replaced by Federico Chiesa seven minutes from time.

Guardiola, meanwhile, revelled in the victory but looked forward to the games that will follow the international break.

“Now rest and come back with the energy,” he said, before reflecting on the pathway that brought him to this stage of a remarkable coaching life.

“I think my period at Barcelona B is the foundation for many things. To realise that I was able to do it and learn a lot.

“I will never forget the guys in that first season. For me, it has been so special to make 1,000 games in front of my family and especially against Liverpool. I have a huge respect for that club.”

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Are Celtic & Rangers starting to click in pursuit of Hearts?

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Heart of Midlothian remain unbeaten at the top of the Scottish Premiership but have dropped points in two of their past three outings.

Meanwhile, Celtic and Rangers have each enjoyed maximum hauls since the appointments of Martin O’Neill and Danny Rohl.

Both men are just in the door, while one is an interim stand-in, and there have been Old Firm disappointments in Europe – but is the dial showing signs of shifting domestically?

Goals start to flow for Celtic

When O’Neill took temporary charge of Celtic last month, he walked into a club rocked by internal division, highlighted by the acrimonious nature of Brendan Rodgers’ exit.

Hearts had beaten Celtic 3-1 at Tynecastle to go eight points clear, with the 73-year-old parachuted in to steady the ship.

Although they were comprehensively outplayed by Midtjylland on Thursday, O’Neill has delivered on the home front, winning all three of his matches, narrowing the league gap and reaching the Premier Sports Cup final at Rangers’ expense.

Celtic’s attack has been freed up under the Northern Irishman, with 11 goals scored in those games.

The champions had managed to score just 10 in the final seven domestic matches under Rodgers, with four of them coming in a League Cup victory over Partick Thistle.

O’Neill praised the nature of Celtic’s 4-0 win over Kilmarnock on Sunday, but stressed they still have plenty of work to do if they are to defend their title.

“There were some parts of the performance I was absolutely delighted with,” he said. “We defended strongly.

“You do need help when you’re chasing someone, but there’s a long way to go.”

On his own future, O’Neill continued to give nothing away, claiming he does not know if he will be in charge at St Mirren in two weeks’ time.

If victory over Kilmarnock does prove to be the final match of his second spell at the club, he says he will gladly accept that.

“I’ll take a little time in the international break, most of our players will be away, and there will be time of inner reflection,” he said.

“It’s been a whirlwind of a fortnight, I can’t believe it’s really happened.

Rangers more resolute under Rohl?

Rangers’ Premiership points tally has doubled since Danny Rohl arrived.

Three league games, three wins, seven goals scored with just one conceded.

Two clean sheets on the road after a club record run of 23 without one in all competitions.

Supporters sung the German’s name with gusto after Sunday’s 3-0 victory at Dundee and Rohl is eager to strengthen the early bond.

“I see a lot of togetherness more and more,” the 36-year-old said.

“I have great support from my staff and my coaches, and the players are listening. If we can bring this together with our fans, then we are all going in one direction and we can build something here.”

Rangers were a muddle of impotent passing for passing’s sake under predecessor Russell Martin – but Rohl’s messaging appears more pragmatic.

There is greater emphasis on getting the ball into the final third quickly, with players willing to go long.

A determined display at Easter Road showed Rangers can dig in and protect a lead too.

The semi-final defeat by Celtic in extra-time was gritty and Rohl’s tactical nous meant his side created good chances when playing the majority of the match with 10 men.

On his promising league start, Rohl added: “I think this is huge, as is keeping clean sheets. That’s helpful.

“We know our expectations are high. We want to do more but it takes steps and I think it’s important to understand that after wins, we are not straight up in one direction and after we lose it’s in another direction.

Rangers graphic

No need for Hearts to panic

Hearts may have seen their lead reduced, but they are yet to lose a league game and can point to good wins against the Old Firm.

Both of O’Neill’s Premiership matches have been at home and sterner tests than Falkirk and Kilmarnock await.

Rangers had to rely on a penalty save and Hibs missing a close-range sitter to leave EH7 with a 1-0 win.

We also witnessed Brann and Roma expose Rohl’s defence in the same brutal fashion Midtjylland dismantled Celtic.

Hearts travel to Aberdeen and Motherwell next but do not have a European fixture in between like their rivals.

Rangers are a long way back and trail Hibs on goal difference, but will be big favourites to win their impending games at home to promoted duo Livingston and Falkirk.

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  • Celtic
  • Rangers
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Are Celtic & Rangers starting to click in pursuit of Hearts?

SNS

Heart of Midlothian remain unbeaten at the top of the Scottish Premiership but have dropped points in two of their past three outings.

Meanwhile, Celtic and Rangers have each enjoyed maximum hauls since the appointments of Martin O’Neill and Danny Rohl.

Both men are just in the door, while one is an interim stand-in, and there have been Old Firm disappointments in Europe – but is the dial showing signs of shifting domestically?

Goals start to flow for Celtic

When O’Neill took temporary charge of Celtic last month, he walked into a club rocked by internal division, highlighted by the acrimonious nature of Brendan Rodgers’ exit.

Hearts had beaten Celtic 3-1 at Tynecastle to go eight points clear, with the 73-year-old parachuted in to steady the ship.

Although they were comprehensively outplayed by Midtjylland on Thursday, O’Neill has delivered on the home front, winning all three of his matches, narrowing the league gap and reaching the Premier Sports Cup final at Rangers’ expense.

Celtic’s attack has been freed up under the Northern Irishman, with 11 goals scored in those games.

The champions had managed to score just 10 in the final seven domestic matches under Rodgers, with four of them coming in a League Cup victory over Partick Thistle.

O’Neill praised the nature of Celtic’s 4-0 win over Kilmarnock on Sunday, but stressed they still have plenty of work to do if they are to defend their title.

“There were some parts of the performance I was absolutely delighted with,” he said. “We defended strongly.

“You do need help when you’re chasing someone, but there’s a long way to go.”

On his own future, O’Neill continued to give nothing away, claiming he does not know if he will be in charge at St Mirren in two weeks’ time.

If victory over Kilmarnock does prove to be the final match of his second spell at the club, he says he will gladly accept that.

“I’ll take a little time in the international break, most of our players will be away, and there will be time of inner reflection,” he said.

“It’s been a whirlwind of a fortnight, I can’t believe it’s really happened.

Rangers more resolute under Rohl?

Rangers’ Premiership points tally has doubled since Danny Rohl arrived.

Three league games, three wins, seven goals scored with just one conceded.

Two clean sheets on the road after a club record run of 23 without one in all competitions.

Supporters sung the German’s name with gusto after Sunday’s 3-0 victory at Dundee and Rohl is eager to strengthen the early bond.

“I see a lot of togetherness more and more,” the 36-year-old said.

“I have great support from my staff and my coaches, and the players are listening. If we can bring this together with our fans, then we are all going in one direction and we can build something here.”

Rangers were a muddle of impotent passing for passing’s sake under predecessor Russell Martin – but Rohl’s messaging appears more pragmatic.

There is greater emphasis on getting the ball into the final third quickly, with players willing to go long.

A determined display at Easter Road showed Rangers can dig in and protect a lead too.

The semi-final defeat by Celtic in extra-time was gritty and Rohl’s tactical nous meant his side created good chances when playing the majority of the match with 10 men.

On his promising league start, Rohl added: “I think this is huge, as is keeping clean sheets. That’s helpful.

“We know our expectations are high. We want to do more but it takes steps and I think it’s important to understand that after wins, we are not straight up in one direction and after we lose it’s in another direction.

Rangers graphic

No need for Hearts to panic

Hearts may have seen their lead reduced, but they are yet to lose a league game and can point to good wins against the Old Firm.

Both of O’Neill’s Premiership matches have been at home and sterner tests than Falkirk and Kilmarnock await.

Rangers had to rely on a penalty save and Hibs missing a close-range sitter to leave EH7 with a 1-0 win.

We also witnessed Brann and Roma expose Rohl’s defence in the same brutal fashion Midtjylland dismantled Celtic.

Hearts travel to Aberdeen and Motherwell next but do not have a European fixture in between like their rivals.

Rangers are a long way back and trail Hibs on goal difference, but will be big favourites to win their impending games at home to promoted duo Livingston and Falkirk.

Related topics

  • Celtic
  • Rangers
  • Scottish Football
  • Football

Is Mali about to fall to an al-Qaeda-affiliated armed group?

Armed group piles pressure on the landlocked Sahel country and its military government.

Fighters affiliated with al-Qaeda have blocked fuel deliveries to Mali’s capital for two months, bringing the city of Bamako to a standstill.

They’ve sealed off the highways that tankers use to transport fuel from neighbouring Senegal and the Ivory Coast. This has put pressure on the landlocked Sahel country and its military government.

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The scale of the blockade, and its impact, show just how much influence the armed group wields. So, are al-Qaeda-linked fighters trying to take power in Mali? And what does that mean for the battle against armed groups in the Sahel region?

Presenter: Nick Clark

Guests:

Moussa Kondo – Executive director of the Sahel Institute

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

Victoria Wood gets huge theatre honour decade on from her death

Legendary actress Victoria Wood has been given a huge honour with a theatre being named after her, a decade after she died aged 62, having battled cancer

Victoria Wood is to have a theatre named in her honour in her beloved Lake District. The 260-seat Old Laundry Theatre in Bowness-on-Windermere has announced that it is to become the Victoria Wood Theatre from January. Wood, who died in 2016, opened the theatre and staged several of her own works there, including Talent in 2008 and a stage adaptation of Housewife 49 in 2013.

Wood had a cottage in nearby Ambleside, which she left to her children, Grace and Henry, after her death in 2016 at the age of 62. Her will instructed them not to sell it ‘so long as it’s enjoyed by family’.

The comedian was also a trustee and patron of the Old Laundry Theatre, which was opened in 1992 by husband-and-wife team Roger Glossop and Charlotte Scott in a disused laundry. They also turned the neighbouring building into the World of Beatrix Potter attraction, which Wood officially opened.

Glossop told the Sunday Times: “People do forget very quickly. The trust is intent on people remembering Vic and her remarkable talent. So what we want from these legacy projects is to keep the name bouncing along.”

The couple first met Wood while working as stage manager and designer on Wood’s musical Talent at the Sheffield Crucible in 1978 and remained lifelong friends, going on family holidays together.

Scott explained: “With young families in tow (hers and ours), we followed Vic’s career as she toured up and down the country, always returning to re-charge in the Lake District. By the time we opened the venue in 1991, followed by the theatre in 1992, Vic, together with Alan Rickman, Griff Rhys Jones, Andre Ptaszynski, Peter James, and Alan Ayckbourn all became trustees and the journey began.”

The renaming will coincide with the world premiere of jukebox musical Fourteen Again, a brand new show featuring Wood’s music and lyrics.

Tom MacRae, who co-wrote the musical Everybody’s Talking About Jamie, has written the script for the show. He wants the musical to work for fans of Wood’s work and for newcomers too.

He said: ”How do you explain Victoria Wood to people who have no context for her? I say, ‘She is probably one of the most beloved British comedians of them all, working at a time when there were very few female comedians and a consensus that women weren’t funny.

“And yet you never think of her as being this trailblazer. She was just the funniest person you wanted to watch. She was just Victoria Wood. She was brilliant. There was an absolute determination within her. But everyone felt like they were friends with her.”

Wood, died from cancer aged 62 in April 2016. She found fame in the 1980s and was best known for her BBC sketch Acorn Antiques and comedy Dinnerladies. She won five Baftas including two for her one-off ITV drama Housewife, 49.

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At the time of her death long-time comedy partner Julie Walters said she was “too heart sore to comment – the loss of her is incalculable”.

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Molly-Mae Hague admits to struggling to sell ‘sentimental’ mansion

Love Island star Molly-Mae Hague has opened up about her struggle to let go of her family home which she has lived in for almost four years and brought her daughter up in

Molly-Mae Hague shared with fans her latest dilemma while on a video post on social media. The reality TV star, who is a mum of one, told fans that she is in a quandary when it comes to the sale of her £3.8million house, as she doesn’t want to let it go – despite knowing she has to.

The 26-year-old reality TV star, who shot to fame on Love Island in 2019, moved into her lavish home in 2022, along with fiancé Tommy Fury.

But things have been somewhat rocky between the pair, which may explain her decision to leave the once family home. Speaking on her vlog, she told fans: “Like I still don’t know what I’m doing in terms of this house.”

She went on to say that “a lot of big decisions need to be made in terms of what I’m going to do with this house, and I’ve mentioned it [but] I don’t want to sell it. I don’t particularly want to rent it ou,t but then equally, what am I keeping it for? I don’t know. I just don’t, I really, really don’t know.”

She then continued: “Like there’s some things, that I know in my mind like I’m ready to do, and I want to do, but like in terms of this house…This house will always be so incredibly sentimental to me.”

Despite her growing fame, Molly expressed that the house she currently shares with her daughter Bambi, “is more than just a house.”

She added: “I don’t know. I think just like need to figure out like what the next few months is going to look like in terms of where I basically go from here and with this house.”

Looking at options in order to stay living in the north of England, she even looked at her mother moving up from the south. But she soon discarded that idea, as her mum’s husband has an “amazing job” in the south.

In an interview with the Decemebr/January issue of Cosmopolitan magazine, she said: “I felt like I’d lived so much life by 23, I felt really ready for a new chapter. Tommy and I were in an incredible place and to have something that was half him, half me, just felt really special. I’ve never had any regrets about starting a family young. “

She added: “But if I could go back and maybe go again, would I have waited a few more years? Potentially. I would love more days to just sit and do absolutely nothing. They were great for my mental health.”

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She also touched on the possibility of having another child. She continued: “I think about it a lot, and I feel a real pressure around it because I’m desperate to give Bambi a sibling.

“But I would never want to do it just for her – I would also want to do it because it is something I want to do. At the same time as being a mum, I also have huge career ambitions and when I fell pregnant with Bambi, my biggest goal was that I didn’t want to lose my identity – I didn’t want to lose myself and my goals and my dreams and my business ambitions because I was becoming a mum.”

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