‘Great ambition’, growing belief – Birmingham eye Premier League return

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“Under the ownership, I’m sure this club is going to arrive in the Premier League,” says Birmingham manager Chris Davies.

“This ambition is there to inspire us, but because of what happened last time they know how unforgiving it can be.

“The ambition is great but there’s a clear understanding of how hard it is.”

This time 12 months ago Blues were preparing for their first season in the third tier for 30 years after a chastening relegation from the Championship.

But there was never cause for concern as Birmingham then stormed to the League One title – with an EFL record of 111 points.

However, with Friday’s Championship opener at home to Ipswich looming, success brings greater expectation.

Results will dictate the mood but chairman and owner Tom Wagner said in June back-to-back promotions was achievable and it is accepted a mid-table finish would be a disappointment.

New signings have been made aware of the expectations this season, to challenge for promotion and join Norwich, Southampton and Ipswich in having gone from League One to the Premier League in successive seasons.

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Birmingham’s journey to the top flight, if and when they reach it, would have started with a detour through League One.

Relegation and five permanent managers in the first season of Knighthead’s ownership was not in the script when they bought the club in July 2023.

The ill-advised sacking of John Eustace – who had Birmingham sitting sixth in the Championship in October that year – was followed by the disastrous tenure of Wayne Rooney.

The ex-England captain lasted 83 days as Blues plummeted from the play-offs to 20th. It was a lesson learned.

Birmingham were always going to make a change but recognised they made it too soon.

Even at the time, minority owner – and seven-time Super Bowl winner – Tom Brady had reservations with Rooney

In Birmingham’s new Amazon Prime documentary series, the NFL icon said: “I’m a little worried about our head coach’s work ethic. I mean, I don’t know, I don’t have great instincts on that.”

Tony Mowbray was appointed but his diagnosis for bowel cancer, something which could have never been predicted, saw him step aside in March 2024. Assistant Mark Venus tried to steady the ship before ex-boss Gary Rowett returned, only to fall short of survival.

Last summer, former Leicester assistant Davies was handed his first senior role and, while he and his staff pulled things together on the pitch, the foundations had been laid for an immediate return to the Championship.

Even before Knighthead officially took over, they provided the money to start work to open the lower tiers of Kop and Tilton Stands which had been closed for more than two years due to asbestos concerns.

The crumbling terraces at St Andrew’s were a perfect metaphor for the club.

When the grow lights, which help maintain the turf, were plugged in earlier in Knighthead’s reign they fused the stadium, with the internet and computers crashing, highlighting a previously unknown power issue.

Between £20m-25m has since been spent on the stadium – and this is before the club moves to a new ground as part of a £3bn regeneration of a new Sports Quarter in the city.

That moved a step closer in June when the government pledged funds, part of a £2.4bn investment in the West Midlands, to create a tramline from the centre to the new 62,000-seater stadium, which Wagner wants open in five years.

There has always been an acknowledgement, especially internally, that the project is about reviving part of the city – some of the most deprived areas – through the club, a bigger picture than just restoring Blues themselves.

Promises have been backed up, meaning trust, respect and belief has been built.

“Actions speak louder than words and the actions have all been there. People are willing to believe it and put their trust in it,” said one source.

Chief executive Jeremy Dale pulled pints at the final home game against Mansfield in April, while director Andrew Shanahan jumped behind the bar to help short-handed staff earlier in the season.

Brady has bought drinks in the Royal George Hotel next to the stadium, while Wagner has also put his card behind the bar several times.

Yet it is more than just about getting a round in.

On Saturday, in the 1-0 win over Nottingham Forest in the Trevor Francis Memorial Match, the club hosted the family of 16-year-old fan Daniel Drewitt, who drowned in the lake at Sutton Park in July, with the stadium rising to pay tribute in the 16th minute.

Trust in the transfer process

Demarai Gray playing for Birmingham this summerGetty Images

An on-off move for Ajax’s Chuba Akpom ended in frustration with the striker preferring a move to Ipswich, who are also back in the second tier after relegation from the Premier League.

The former Arsenal and Middlesbrough forward was in Birmingham and due for a medical, but instead opted to travel to Suffolk to finalise a move – a rare blow in a summer of ambitious recruitment.

Winger Demarai Gray, a Premier League title winner with Leicester, returned to St Andrew’s after leaving to join the Foxes in 2016.

Spells at Bayer Leverkusen and Everton followed, while the 29-year-old rejoined Birmingham after just under two years in Saudi Arabia with Al-Ettifaq.

England Under-21 goalkeeper James Beadle, who helped the Young Lions win Euro 2025 in Slovakia this summer, has also joined on loan from Brighton for a large six-figure fee.

Midfielder Tommy Doyle’s loan from Wolves will turn into a £10m permanent deal on promotion, while former Celtic forward Kyogo Furuhashi arrived for a reported £10m from Rennes.

The moves follow the £15m outlay for striker Jay Stansfield last summer, with the striker scoring 23 goals in all competitions.

It was the largest part of the £25m outlay that led to Birmingham finishing 19 points clear of second-placed Wrexham.

They deliberately ensured the majority of business was done early this year, signing one a day in the opening week of the transfer window – including the free transfer arrival of defender Phil Neumann from Hannover.

Famous 2011 League Cup triumph harnessed

There is a recognition everything has happened at speed in the last two years.

While there has been little time for a breather and nothing is ever guaranteed, confidence remains high at St Andrew’s.

Is the pressure on then? Expectation levels change, naturally, and there is a recognition at the club there is likely to be a reality check at times in the Championship.

Pride comes before a fall but, when that was put to a senior source, the response was that it only came when the work-rate dropped. There was no sign of that, though, as the work ethic for success only increased – Wagner and the board demand results, with the chairman described as being “always in a hurry”.

When he and the new board arrived, the word ‘unbelievable’ was used in early leadership team meetings. That stemmed from the shock League Cup win in 2011 – Obafemi Martins’ last-minute goal snatching a 2-1 win over Arsenal at Wembley.

Birmingham were huge underdogs – relegated too at the end of that campaign – but the word ‘unbelievable’ was heard, almost on repeat, from a stunned but delirious fanbase.

It was the highest point of an era which saw relegation, then owner Carson Yeung charged with money laundering in 2011 – he was eventually jailed – and another evasive and divisive ownership in Trillion Trophy Asia, which led to huge fractures within the club, and between them and the fanbase.

Yet the euphoria of their Wembley triumph was not forgotten – and that feeling has been harnessed by those currently overseeing their revival.

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End-of-season sale offers last chance to buy unique apple tree for a fraction of its full price

Green-thumbed shoppers looking to add a unique apple tree to their outdoor space, without breaking the bank, shouldn’t snooze on this end-of-season sale that’s offering a huge discount

Sale offers last chance to buy unique apple tree for a fraction of full price(Image: Getty)

Gardening Express is currently hosting a massive end-of-season clearance sale, where covetable plants are sporting major discounts. One such plant is this unique apple tree, specially created to produce two different types of apples in one compact plant that’s perfectly suited to gardens and patios alike.

Normally costing a steep £79.99, this duo apple tree is currently available for £29.99, saving shoppers a massive £50 while this sale lasts. But, if you want to add this brilliant tree to your outside area for its majorly reduced price, you’ll want to hurry – this is the last chance to pick up the tree before the clearance sale ends.

READ MORE: Tesco is offering this compact 4-in-1 airfryer worth £70 for £28 for university shoppers

READ MORE: End of season clearance sale slashes huge palm tree worth £180 to under £60

Golden Delicious and Gala Apple Tree
This duo Golden Delicious and Gala apple tree is now £29.99 down from £79.99(Image: Gardening Express)

Gardening Express proudly presents this multi-variety fruit tree, a specially grown duo tree from one of the only nurseries in the UK to offer incredible, unique trees that allow you to grow two different varieties of fruit in the minimum of space.

Grafted onto special rootstocks that ensure your new tree will always remain compact, reaching around 8-10ft at maturity, meaning your fruit will always be in easy reach to pick, and the trees will remain manageable no matter whether you’re planting yours into the garden or into a pot.

If you have limited space but have always wanted to grow several different fruit varieties, these trees are perfect. Each tree produces good yields of delicious fruits and is especially suited to small spaces.

With the duo fruit tree, there is sure to be a flavour to suit all tastes, as it provides multiple varieties of delicious fruit throughout the season. Plus, as there are two varieties grafted onto one tree, they can cross-pollinate each other, making the tree entirely self-fertile, with no need to plant extra trees nearby to help with pollination. This duo tree process Gala Apples and Golden Delicious Apples.

Supplied well established and pot grown, these trees are up to 180cms tall on delivery, very strong and sturdy, and ready to fruit. Plant straight into the garden or into your desired planter as soon as they arrive, and depending on the season, they may start growing fruit sooner rather than later.

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Normally costing £79.99, this end-of-season clearance sale is allowing shoppers to add this unique tree to their gardens for the much-reduced price of £29.99, but only for a limited time.

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Guernsey FC expelled from FA Cup after admin error

Franco Torode

Guernsey FC was forced out of the FA Cup after fielding an ineligible player.

In their first competitive game of the season, the islanders drew 1-1 with Bedfont Sports on Saturday in the extra preliminary round of the competition.

However, the club announced on Monday that they had discovered a registration error with one of the teams that had participated in the club’s first FA Cup game in eight years.

Due to the outcome of an investigation, Tuesday’s scheduled replay between the two sides in London was postponed.

A statement from Guernsey FC read, “We have just received official confirmation that the club has been removed from this season’s competition.”

Kingstonian will now host Bedfont Sports on August 16th.

When Guernsey FC hosts Wick at Victoria Park on Saturday, they will play their first game ever in the Southern Combination Premier Division.

A Channel Island team has received a sanction for fielding an ineligible player for the second time this year.

Jersey Bulls received three points in April for playing a player who should have received a suspension, which cost them the Combined Counties Premier South league title.

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  • FA Cup
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Man Found Dead With Gunshot Wound In Akwa Ibom Church

Udeme Uko, a 45-year-old man, is suspected of killing him, according to the Akwa Ibom State Police Command, which is located in the state’s Ukanafun Local Government Area.

Uko was discovered dead in a nearby church while he was sleeping with his family.

This was stated in a statement released by the command’s DSP Timfon John in Uyo.

The incident, according to the PPRO, took place on August 5, 2025, at around 12:10 am while the victim, his wife, and their children were sleeping in a church in the Ikot Oku Usung village, according to the preliminary report.

She claims that a gunshot was audible inside the church, and that Uko’s head had been later discovered to be shot in the head, which would indicate either a suicide or an attack.

Read more about the suspected murder of a police officer and eight others in Benue.

 

The statement read, “Akwa Ibom State Police Command has launched a full-scale investigation into the suspected murder of a 45-year-old man, Mr. Udeme Sunday Uko, who was found in a pool of blood while sleeping with his family inside a church in the Ukanafun Local Government Area.

Concerned citizens who received the report from the victim’s wife sent the command an alert to the incident. A team of police officers arrived at the crime scene right away after receiving the information.

A locally produced pistol was recovered as an exhibit during the visit. Since then, the deceased’s corpse has been deposited at the  Mortuary for preservation and autopsy.

The Command assured the public that all necessary resources would be used to bring the perpetrators to justice despite the fact that the investigation was still in progress.