Archive November 9, 2025

‘Motivated’ Alcaraz beats De Minaur at ATP Finals

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Carlos Alcaraz says he has entered the ATP Finals “with motivation” as he moved a step closer to the year-end world number one ranking with victory over Alex de Minaur.

The 22-year-old Spaniard won his opening Jimmy Connors Group match 7-6 (7-5) 6-2 in one hour and 40 minutes in Turin, Italy.

Alcaraz is making his third appearance at the season-ending tournament but has never reached the final before.

He withdrew injured in 2022, lost in the semi-finals on debut a year later and failed to qualify from the group last year.

Alcaraz is battling rival Jannik Sinner for the top ranking, with the Italian moving back to the top spot after his victory at the Paris Masters last week.

“I’ve been struggling in the past three years to come to the end of the year with energy and motivation. This year is a little bit different,” Alcaraz said.

“I’m really proud about the way I’ve been doing things to come here with motivation.

“I’m really excited and looking forward to playing great tennis, and giving myself a shot to try to win this tournament.”

The 28-year-old German lost only one of 17 points on serve in the first set and 10 of 54 across the match, finishing with a 81% first-serve percentage.

Australian Open finalist Zverev did not face a break point in the match but had to rally from 6-3 down in the second-set tie-break to advance.

    • 1 day ago
    • 1 day ago

Alcaraz edges closer to number one spot

World number two Alcaraz provided his usual moments of shot-making brilliance against De Minaur, hitting a total of 32 winners, but he was scrappy at times in the first set.

Alcaraz raced to an early lead but missed three break points for a 5-1 advantage – and then found himself two points from losing the opener in the tie-break.

De Minaur’s trademark fight took him to the brink of winning the set but, leading 5-3 in the breaker, lost the next four points to concede it.

Set two began with three consecutive breaks of serve, two of them in favour of Alcaraz, before a run of three sensational winners in a row put Alcaraz firmly in charge.

Despite defeat for De Minaur – who has not beaten Alcaraz in five attempts – the 26-year-old Australian should take confidence from his performance against the six-time Grand Slam champion.

Alcaraz and defending champion Sinner have split the four Grand Slam titles between them this year.

They are in different groups and are widely tipped to meet in the final on Sunday, 16 November.

This is what each has to do to end 2025 as world number one:

In the doubles, British top seeds Julian Cash and Lloyd Glasspool – who won the Wimbledon title in July – lost 7-5 6-3 to Italian duo Simone Bolelli and Andrea Vavassori.

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    • 16 August
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Love Island star Amy Hart pregnant with second child after heartbreaking miscarriages

Love Island’s Amy Hart has shared she is expecting her second baby following two miscarriages as she said she is ‘very excited’, but the ‘nerves are ‘hard to settle’

Love Island’s Amy Hart has announced on her Instagram that she is pregnant with her second child, following two heartbreaking miscarriages in the last year. Amy, 31, who is alread a proud mum to two year old Stanley, said while she is ‘very excited’, the ‘nerves are ‘hard to settle’.

She announced the exciting news to her 1 million followers with a sweet video where she is going pumpkin picking with her son and her husband, Sam Rason, who she tied the knot with last year.

Amy wore a knitted bodycon dress, which perfectly showed off her bump, with a beige trench coat over the top. She wrote in the caption: “Sam & I are over-the-moon to share…we’re expecting again.” Going into more detail on her pregnancy journey, she said: “This time the journey has been longer. After two heartbreaking miscarriages in the last year, we’re both very excited, yet the anxiety and nerves are hard to settle.”

READ MORE: Molly-Mae Hague feeling the ‘pressure’ to have second child as she shares regretREAD MORE: Molly-Mae Hague admits to struggling to sell ‘sentimental’ mansion

“That’s why we waited to tell you all, but the bump is now impossible to hide, and Stanley’s been proudly announcing “Mummy has a baby in her tummy!” to anyone who’ll listen. He has also decided he has a baby in his tummy too!”

She finished off the post with: “ Christmas with our little man feels extra magical this year, and then a new family chapter begins in 2026.”

Sam, a proud dad and husband, left a sweet comment, writing: “I can’t wait for our family to grow again. It definitely has been an anxious journey for us both over the last 10 months and I still feel it each day that passes. I love being a father and watching you grow as a mother. And to see Stanley become a big brother will be a special experience. Love you millions.”

The former Love Island star was flooded with congratulatory messages. Molly-Mae commented: “Awwwww mama!!!! Congratulations”, while Yasmin Pettet wrote: “omg congratulations!!! Xx”.

Another follower wrote: “SO happy for you mama! And so sorry about your news, you’re so strong. Sending you so much love. I can’t wait to watch you guys xxx”, while a fourth said: “Aww so happy for you, sorry for your losses”.

She opened up to OK! Earlier this year where she said she would ‘love’ to have more children and admitted that they were ‘trying’.

She said at the time: “I’d love more children. We’re trying at the moment. It’s obviously not been as simple as it was with Stanley, but I’m manifesting and doing all the right things. I’m doing intermittent fasting to try and lose some weight, because though my BMI is not crazy high, it’s higher than what’s recommended for the optimum weight for getting pregnant.”

She added: “I feel like at the moment it’s quite hard to talk about online. Once, hopefully, I have some good news, then I’ll be able to share more and help others.”

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Myleene Klass’ ‘horrific experience’ in court following harrowing stalker ordeal

Myleene Klass has opened up about her time in court last month, where Peter Windsor, 61, was found guilty of stalking Myleene and her Classic FM colleague Katie Breathwick

Former Hear’Say star Myleene Klass has opened up about her ‘horrific experience’ in court last month, where she was cross-examined and was made to doubt herself. She appeared in Birmingham Crown Court in October, where Peter Windsor, 61, was found guilty of stalking Myleene and her Classic FM colleague Katie Breathwick.

Myleene told Birmingham Crown Court of her ‘sheer terror’ at discovering numerous items had been sent to the radio station’s central London studios, including fancy dress outfits and an air pistol.

Myleene said, ‘It was a horrific experience’, adding she ‘underestimated’ the court experience and said they made her feel like she had done something wrong.

READ MORE: Kelly Brook to recreate Myleene Klass show moment on I’m A CelebREAD MORE: I’m A Celebrity bosses inspired by Love Island for ‘dramatic’ change to ITV series

She told The Times: “Court was the most sobering part. I underestimated it. My goodness, the way women who take the stand are made to feel they’ve done something wrong, to prove they didn’t want these items and this attention. ‘How did you feel when you received this? How did you know the stalking was real?’ I don’t know how people get through it.”

Myleene was questioned on how she knew the handcuffs were real and how she knew the gun was real. “They had to bring in police to tell the jury, ‘This is a gun,’ and have them feel it. It was utterly ludicrous point scoring. I was asked why I didn’t tell my stalker to stop. That stopped me in my tracks. I had to admit it hadn’t occurred to me to write back to my stalker and ask him to keep away. Their response was, like, ‘Gotcha!’”

Giving evidence against Peter Windsor, Myleene said she was informed in an email in August last year of an “accumulation” of items sent to her by the 61-year-old.

Peter Windsor denies stalking both Myleene and her Classic FM colleague Katie by sending items to the station’s central London studios between 2020 and 2024.

Myleene told the court she was shown a list of items and photographs of some of the letters after being informed of them, having previously not been told about the mail to avoid worrying her.

Answering questions from prosecutor Timothy Sapwell, Myleene said: “It was very clear very quickly that it was a highly volatile selection of items.

“It was a huge shock, especially the extent to which it had escalated.

“It was pretty overwhelming when you have the accumulation of a bundle of this information. It’s pretty terrifying.”

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‘Man City make ominous statement in brutal lesson 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, saying: “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 City, also effectively settling the 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.

    • 9 hours ago
    • 14 hours ago

‘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 just 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 their own corner flag 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 and send a header past 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.

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

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 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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Man City make ominous statement on chastening night for Liverpool

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  • 39 Comments

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.

    • 2 hours ago

‘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.

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

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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  • Liverpool
  • Premier League
  • Manchester City
  • Football

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Man City make ominous statement on chastening night for Liverpool

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  • 39 Comments

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.

    • 2 hours ago

‘A brutal lesson for Liverpool’

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

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.

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

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.”

Related topics

  • Liverpool
  • Premier League
  • Manchester City
  • Football

More on this story

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