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    Thomas Tuchel ready to fast-track Myles Lewis-Skelly into England squad after Arsenal starlet’s incredible breakthrough

    ENGLAND manager Thomas Tuchel is monitoring Myles Lewis-Skelly ahead of a potential call-up.The Arsenal full-back, 18, has become a regular for Mikel Arteta’s side of late.Myles Lewis-Skelly has been an Arsenal regular of lateCredit: GettyThomas Tuchel is reportedly considering the Arsenal full-backCredit: GettyWith the Three Lions having struggled at left-back, Lewis-Skelly could be fast tracked into the senior squad.Tuchel, 51, is said to hold some reservations over the Gunners teenager’s age and lack of experience.Lewis-Skelly has not even yet debuted for England’s Under-21s, let alone the senior side.With Tuchel short at left-back, however, Lewis-Skelly has a chance to quickly becoming part of the squad.READ MORE IN FOOTBALLAccording to The Times, Tuchel has twice personally checked in on the Arsenal academy graduate’s progress.They add that England staff are “stepping up” their scouting of Lewis-Skelly.Tuchel is set to take charge of the Three Lions for the first time against Albania at Wembley on March 21.Three days later his side will host Latvia in a further World Cup qualifier.Most read in FootballSUN BINGO GET £50 BONUS & 50 FREE SPINS TODAYLewis-Skelly, who has made 10 Premier League appearances for Arsenal, will hope to be involved.Luke Shaw has been England’s preferred left-back in recent years but has been dogged by injuries.’I’m getting emotional’ – England manager Thomas Tuchel’s comments on Cole Palmer leave Chelsea fans close to tearsThe Manchester United star has played just three times this season, but could be in line to return in the FA Cup this weekend.Meanwhile, Ben Chilwell will hope to return to contention after joining Crystal Palace on loan from Chelsea.Chilwell is a player Tuchel knows well from his time at Stamford Bridge.Lewis Hall has enjoyed a breakthrough campaign with Newcastle and earned his first two caps earlier this season.While Djed Spence has recently excelled at right and left-back for Tottenham.Tuchel did not attend Arsenal’s clash with Manchester City on Sunday.READ MORE SUN STORIESInstead he headed to Italy to watch AC Milan’s 1-1 draw with city rivals Inter.The match was Kyle Walker’s Milan debut, while Fikayo Tomori and Tammy Abraham were also in action.Tuchel watched Kyle Walker in action last weekendCredit: Rex More

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    LaLiga chaos as referees willing to go on STRIKE after Real Madrid statement claiming decisions are ‘manipulated’

    LALIGA referees are reportedly considering going on strike after a letter from Real Madrid questioning their integrity.In a bombshell statement, the Champions League winners said “decisions against Real Madrid have reached a level of manipulation and adulteration of the competition that can no longer be ignored.”LaLiga referees are willing to go on strike after Real Madrid issued a statement claiming their decisions were ‘manipulated’Credit: AFPReal Madrid were left furious after this challenge on Kylian Mbappe was only punished with a yellow cardCredit: DAZNVinicius Jr also saw a goal disallowed due to this off-the-ball challenge from MbappeLos Blancos were left furious with the quality of officiating during their 1-0 loss at Espanyol.Vinicius Jr saw a first half goal disallowed for an off-the-ball foul by Kylian Mbappe.And Espanyol’s Carlos Romero was only shown a yellow card for a studs-up lunge on Mbappe, before going on to score the winning goal.The Real Madrid letter also stated: “The scandal generated by this match has once again had worldwide repercussions, with the international press denouncing the biased use of VAR in Spain and the lack of credibility of Spanish refereeing.”READ MORE ON REAL MADRIDAnd the club called for the VAR audio footage of the incidents in question to be released immediately.But, answering a question from a caller, Cope journalist Isaac Fouto claimed that some referees in LaLiga are in favour of going on strike in response to the accusations.He said: “There are referees from the First Division who believe that they should go on strike.”But he added: “The strike is either everyone [or no-one]… some have said they will go, but everyone has to go.Most read in FootballCASINO SPECIAL – BEST CASINO BONUSES FROM £10 DEPOSITS”It is being considered, it is being considered in the environment. If this takes this turn, the competition will stop.”Following the Real Madrid letter, the Spanish FA [RFEF] released a statement backing its officials.Wholesome moment Jude Bellingham leaves a young Real Madrid fan crying with happiness as he hands him his shirtThe RFEF commented: “The refereeing task, by its very nature, is subject to review and analysis.”But this cannot lead to generalised accusations that cast doubt on their integrity, as this not only affects the referees themselves, but also erodes the credibility of soccer as a whole.“It is important to reflect on the consequences of this type of systematic questioning of refereeing. “Constantly delegitimizing the work of referees outside the established channels generates a climate of mistrust that benefits neither Spanish football nor its competitions.”Meanwhile Carlo Ancelotti has come out and said that the refereeing is better in the Premier League than LaLiga.The Real Madrid boss said: “What league has the best referees? Difficult to say. It’s a tough job. “What I can say is referees suffer less pressure in England, so they do their job better.” More

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    Derek Chisora vs Otto Wallin: Start time, TV channel, live stream, undercard for heavyweight clash

    DEREK CHISORA and Otto Wallin prepare for battle as they go head to head in a heavyweight clash in Manchester.Derek Chisora has already vowed to end his sparkling career after his 50th fight, and enters his 49th and penultimate fight on Saturday, February 8.Derek Chisora saw off Joe Joyce last summer in LondonCredit: GettyOtto Wallin looks for a 28th victory against Derek ChisoraCredit: ReutersWith a record of 35-13-0, Chisora has fought the best of the best in the heavyweight division.His last bout was a sensational unanimous decision victory over Joe Joyce in July last year, but with only two more to retirement, Otto Wallin will want to put a stopper in his retirement tour.Swedish boxer Wallin has a record of 27-2-1 after 30 fights, most recently in a losing effort to Anthony Joshua in Riyadh.His first loss was to Anthony Joshua’s fellow British fighter, Tyson Fury, in 2019.When is Derek Chisora vs Otto Wallin?Derek Chisora vs Otto Wallin will take place on Saturday, February 8The card will be live on TNT Sports from around 6pm GMT.Ring walks are expected around 10pm GMT.The CO-OP Live in Manchester will host the event.What TV channel is Derek Chisora vs Otto Wallin and can it be live streamed?Derek Chisora vs Otto Wallin will be live of TNT Sports.TNT Sports will stream the action live to viewers in the UK.Non-members can take out a monthly subscription for £29.99 to watch the fight.Coverage is expected to get underway at around 6pm GMT.Full cardDerek Chisora vs Otto WallinWilly Hutchinson vs Zach Parker for the vacant WBC silver light-heavyweight championshipNathan Heaney vs Sofiane KhatiJack Rafferty vs Reece MacMillan for the British, Commonwealth & WBC super-lightweight championshipMasood Abdulah vs Zak Miller for the Commonwealth featherweight championshipNelson Hysa vs Todorche Cvetkov for the WBO European heavyweight championshipWalter Fury vs Joe HardyJoe Copper vs Artjom SpatarLewis Williams vs Cristian UwakaLeighton Birchall vs TBAJermaine Dhilwayo vs Mark Butler More

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    How net transfer spend of Premier League ‘Big Six’ compares since Pep Guardiola’s arrival with Man Utd outspending City

    PEP GUARDIOLA hit the panic button in the January transfer window.After the worst run of his managerial career – which included five defeats in a row before collapsing against Feyenoord – he sanctioned a whopping £182million outlay to try and rescue Manchester City’s season.Pep Guardiola is spending his way out of trouble amid a difficult season for Man CityCredit: GettyMan City have splashed the cash in January including £64m on Omar MarmoushCredit: GettyCity started off their New Year spending spree by landing centre-back Abdukodir Khusanov for £33.6m.The Premier League’s first Uzbek player was followed to the Etihad by fellow defender Vitor Reis for £29.6m.Guardiola then bolstered his attack with the biggest signing of the January transfer window in England, dropping £64m on Omar Marmoush from Eintracht Frankfurt.Juma Bah joined for £5.1m and then City ensured they secured the four biggest deals of the month by snapping up £50m Spanish midfielder Nico Gonzalez on deadline day. READ MORE IN FOOTBALLTogether with Savinho as their main new acquisition back in the summer for £21m, City spent more than £200m on players this season. But they also made £159m in sales.More than half of that came from Julian Alvarez’s exit to Atletico Madrid while Joao Cancelo headed to Saudi Arabia and once again the cash added up by letting a host of academy graduates go. But City’s £201m expenditure and £42m net spend were both far exceeded by neighbours Manchester United.Most read in FootballCASINO SPECIAL – BEST CASINO BONUSES FROM £10 DEPOSITSRuben Amorim’s main signing in January was the £29m dropped on left-back Patrick Dorgu – adding to the £200m spent in the summer on the likes of Joshua Zirkzee, Leny Yoro, Matthijs de Ligt, Noussair Mazraoui and Manuel Ugarte. With only £86m raised in departures, the 2024-25 net spend was £143m. Meet Man City signing Nico Gonzalez, who is son of Pep Guardiola’s former team-mate and could be £50m Rodri solution And that was the biggest of the ‘Big Six’ this season – therefore extending their ‘lead’ as the overall biggest net spenders among the elite English clubs since 2016, when Pep Guardiola arrived. 1. MAN UTD – £1billionSince 2016, Manchester United have spent a staggering £1.37billion on new players.Paul Pogba’s £89m arrival that year remains the club record, although Antony (£85.5m), Harry Maguire (£85m), Romelu Lukaku (£75m), Jadon Sancho (£73m) and Rasmus Hojlund (£72m) all arrived in massive deals.Their biggest signing this season was Leny Yoro for up to £52m. United’s record sale remains Cristiano Ronaldo to Real Madrid for £80m in 2009 so the highest fee received in the period since 2016 is the £73m they got from Inter Milan for Romelu Lukaku in 2019.Ironically, the money banked for Mason Greenwood (£26.6m) and Scott McTominay (£25m) in the summer are among the biggest United sales of all time.Across the period from 2016, United have sold £371m worth of players – the lowest in the ‘Big Six’ – to take their overall net spend to just about exactly £1bn. Man Utd are the biggest net spenders in the Premier League – and unveiled new signings Patrick Dorgu and Ayden Heaven on SundayCredit: Getty2. CHELSEA – £836millionChelsea’s crazy spending has gone to even more bonkers levels since Todd Boehly took over in 2022. But in the last nine seasons, the total is barely believable: a staggering £1.97bn. This season’s £54m deal for Pedro Neto does not even make the top ten on their list – behind the likes of Wesley Fofana (£75m), Kai Havertz (£70m) and that man Lukaku again (£97.5m).Chelsea are the only English team to have spent £100m-plus on two different transfers – the £106m for Enzo Fernandez and £100m, possibly rising to £115m, for Moises Caicedo. But while Chelsea are the biggest Prem spenders, they are also the biggest Prem sellers, racking up £1.13bn in player exits – including £88m (Eden Hazard to Real Madrid), £65m (Havertz to Arsenal) and £60m (Mason Mount to United) – as their net spend works out as £836m. That was helped by fetching big money for Ian Maatsen (£37.5m), Lewis Hall (£28m), Conor Gallagher (£36m) and Lukaku (£25.2m) this term. Pedro Neto doesn’t even crack the top ten biggest Chelsea transfers in the last nine seasons, even at £54mCredit: AP3. MAN CITY – £695millionWe’ve already discussed City’s spending this season but how does that play into the overall picture in the Guardiola era?In total, the Etihad giants are second for outlays on £1.46bn.Marmoush’s arrival is fourth in their all-time list, just behind Ruben Dias and then a way off Josko Gvardiol (£77m) and record-signing Jack Grealish who cost £100m.As with Chelsea, though, City fetch some hefty prices for selling off a wave of youngsters good enough for many teams but just not quite at Guardiola’s required elite level. The Alvarez deal could rise to £81.5m while the money for Taylor Harwood-Bellis (£20m), Liam Delap (£15m), Sergio Gomez (£8.4m) and Tommy Doyle (£4.3m) racks up.After Alvarez, City’s other biggest sales in the period are Raheem Sterling, Ferran Torres, Gabriel Jesus, Leroy Sane and Cole Palmer (all between £47.5m and £40m). And the total tally is a net spend of £695m with Guardiola in the dugout.4. ARSENAL – £688millionCity’s net spend is just £7m or so more than Arsenal’s over the same period – but they have six more Premier League titles, four more League Cups, an extra Champions League and an extra Club World Cup to show for it, and the same number of FA Cups. Arsenal’s total is £688m in the red – including approximately £23m this season with approximately £100m spent and £77m received. David Raya (£27m), Riccardo Calafiori (£42m), and Mikel Merino (£31m) were the major arrivals but Emile Smith Rowe (£27m), Aaron Ramsdale (£18m) and Eddie Nketiah (£25m) all departed. Arsenal have not been afraid to spend big, splashing out £60m on Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang and £72m on Nicolas Pepe before the more recent arrivals of £65m Kai Havertz and £105m Declan Rice. The Smith Rowe deal is their fifth-biggest sale ever – and Nketiah ninth – while Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain tops the pile on £35m to Liverpool in 2017.Riccardo Calafiori is Arsenal’s biggest purchase of 2024-25 at £42mCredit: Getty5. TOTTENHAM – £580millionTottenham are just shy of the £1bn spending mark since 2016 – on £995m.That includes £145m this season on record arrival Dominic Solanke (£65m), £40m on Archie Gray, £25m on Wilson Odobert and £12.5m on goalkeeper Antonin Kinsky who came in during January. Other major outlays were Richarlison (£50m), Dejan Kulusevski (£25m), James Maddison (£40m), Pedro Porro (£37.3m), Micky van de Ven (£35m) and Brennan Johnson (£47.5m). As for their sales, they total £415m in the time frame – the big one being Harry Kane leaving for Bayern Munich at the beginning of last season for an initial £86m.Kyle Walker’s move to Manchester City in 2017 was worth around £50m but the biggest sales this season were Oliver Skipp to Leicester (£20m), Emerson Royal to Milan (£12.8m) and Joe Rodon to Leeds (£10m). And that all means Spurs are down £580m on transfer fees since 2016.Dominic Solanke set back Tottenham £65m last summerCredit: Getty6. LIVERPOOL – £282millionPerhaps it is no surprise to see Liverpool with the best net spend of the ‘Big Six’ on a mere £282m over the past nine seasons. In fact, the Reds have actually made a profit in the 2024-25 campaign by only buying Federico Chiesa for £10m and raising £50m in sales from Fabio Carvalho (£20m), Sepp van den Berg (£20m) and Bobby Clark (£10m). It continued a wise – and successful – transfer strategy that has seen Liverpool sell big and then wait to find the right players at the right time for the right price. In the pre-2016 era not included in these figures, Liverpool sold Luis Suarez, Fernando Torres and Raheem Sterling.They then secured an eye-watering £145m from Barcelona for Philippe Coutinho in 2018, making up more than a quarter of their £505m in sales during the set period. READ MORE SUN STORIESLiverpool have not been afraid to splash the cash too – £787m in total since 2016 – with te overall £85.3m deal for Darwin Nunez in 2022 their record signing ahead of Virgil van Dijk (£75m), Alisson (£67m), Dominik Szoboszlai (£60m) and Naby Keita (£53m). Interestingly, Liverpool’s £282m net spend since 2016 is significantly less than West Ham (£451m) and Newcastle (£396m) and just £8m more than Aston Villa after they sold Jaden Philogene (£20m), Diego Carlos (£8.5m) and Jhon Duran (£64m) in January.Liverpool have made a £40m profit this season, signing only £10m man Federico ChiesaCredit: Getty More

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    Major Newcastle stadium update with club leaning towards new £1.6billion venue that would overlap St James’ Park

    NEWCASTLE chiefs are edging towards building a new £1.2billion stadium, according to reports.Toon bosses want to either expand or leave their traditional St James’ Park home.Newcastle could look to leave their St James’ Park homeCredit: GettyThe new stadium could be built adjacent to St James’ Park over a portion of Leazes ParkCredit: Getty – ContributorBoard members have been exploring the possibility of departing St James’ Park for a new stadium.According to the Telegraph, Newcastle’s new stadium would overlap the current ground’s Leazes and Milburn Stands.The rest of it would stand over what is currently part of Leazes Park.One stumbling block could be that Leazes Park is a protected Victorian-era green space.READ MORE IN FOOTBALLClub bosses hope that by only needing a small portion of the park, and by building new green space nearby, members of the public and council could be persuaded.The new stadium would hold just under 70,000 supporters.This would make it the second-biggest club football stadium in the country.In building their new stadium, Newcastle would likely opt for a similar path followed by Tottenham, who also built adjacent to their former home on land they already owned.Most read in FootballSUN BINGO GET £50 BONUS & 50 FREE SPINS TODAYNewcastle’s new stadium could be built adjacent to the current groundThe road that currently runs behind the Milburn Stand would not be altered by new plans.But the car park by the current Leazes Stand would need to be demolished.Premier League stadium given subtle makeover during international breakIt’s hoped that Newcastle could continue playing at St James’ Park after work was to get underway.A temporary relocation is not out of the question, although they would not groundshare with rivals Sunderland.The most realistic option would be to play at Murrayfield in Edinburgh, around 120 miles away.Newcastle would hope to have a possible new stadium finished in time for the 2031-32 season. Despite leaning towards building a new ground, no decision has yet been made.The Newcastle board will eventually present their final preference to the club’s Saudi owners, who will have the ultimate say.Rather than building a whole new stadium, the Toon could still opt to renovate the Gallowgate End.READ MORE SUN STORIESThis could still take the overall capacity to in excess of 60,000, while likely being a much quicker job than a total rebuild.No decision has yet been made and all avenues are still being explored.The Gallowgate End could be renovatedThe Gallowgate End could undergo significant changesCredit: Rex More

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    Meet Nico O’Reilly, 19, who could replace Rodri and was denied Chelsea transfer as Man City feared ‘another Cole Palmer’

    NICO O’REILLY did not expect to play a minute when he was selected in Manchester City’s squad for their four match pre-season tour of the USA in July.But three weeks later he had scored against Barcelona in Orlando – and also had a Community Shield winner’s medal in his pocket after holding his own against five-time Champions League winner Casemiro against rivals Manchester United at Wembley.Nico O’Reilly (left) celebrates Man City’s Community Shield triumph with fellow youngsters Rico Lewis, James McAtee and Oscar BobbCredit: GettyO’Reilly (right) scored his first City goal in the 8-0 FA Cup demolition of SalfordCredit: RexThe midfielder celebrates his strike with Jeremy DokuCredit: RexHe started the Carabao Cup victory over WatfordCredit: GettyThe youngster was also in the starting XI for the Carabao Cup defeat by SpursCredit: AlamyO’Reilly recovering from a serious ankle injury sustained in 2023He was denied a deadline day move to Chelsea, as City feared another ‘Cole Palmer’ situation and one of their academy lads starring in West London.HOW DOES HE PLAY AND WHO DOES HE REMIND YOU OF?Well, anyone who follows City’s youngsters should forget what they thought they knew about O’Reilly – because Guardiola has other ideas.The boss announced in the States – to the surprise of everyone – that O’Reilly, 19, could be a deputy for Rodri as a holding midfielder.Praise doesn’t come much higher than that at City.READ MORE IN BOY WONDERSHowever it raised some eyebrows as he has generally played further forward – even as a No10 or a false nine – while coming through the academy system at City.But maybe his versatility is what appeals to the Etihad boss, who does like a midfielder who can fill a variety of positions  After a spell on the sidelines with injury last season, the England Under-20 star returned to training and Guardiola was shocked by how much he had grown.The hope at City is he can use that physicality and grow into the role that Rodri plays so effectively as he reads the game particularly well.Most read in FootballHe also showed that he is much more than just a stopper with his superbly taken goal against Barcelona in Orlando.That was more like the O’Reilly they knew at the City Football Academy – where he had a reputation for scoring eye-catching goals.He netted his first for the senior side in the 8-0 FA Cup demolition of Salford.Arsenal teenager Jacker Porter made his Gunners debut against Bolton and became a record breakerHis Under-21 coaches say he would be capable of doing a variety of different jobs for Pep and that he has all the attributes to be a top player.TELL US ABOUT HIS RISEHe’s been playing for his boyhood club City since the under-nines and has come through in the same cohort as Rico Lewis.He made the bench for Pep Guardiola’s first team at Brighton in spring 2023 but then a serious ankle injury stopped his progress. However he has picked up where he left off. At City they still talk about a scorpion kick he scored against Middlesbrough for the youth team and a 40-yard lob against United in the junior derby.  WHAT ARE THE EXPERTS SAYING? Ben Wilkinson is now boss of City’s EDS but has seen O’Reilly come through the ranks. He said: “Historically, he’s played as a No8 – or a No10 in the academy.“But his ceiling is very high – and he’s got more attributes than people give him credit for. His technical level is very high. Hopefully he can put his physicality into his game because he’s got a lot of things you need to be a top midfielder.“His performances were one of the highlights of the tour so hopefully Pep has learned if he needs to use him then he can.He’s a guy who will be a playerGuardiola on O’ReillyGuardiola himself said: “He’s a guy who will be a player. He was injured for a long time last season.“He came back in the middle of the season, trained with us and I said ‘Wow. This guy is big.”He’s about 6ft 2in and has a presence about him.WHAT DOES THE NEXT 12 MONTHS HOLD? Guardiola insisted he would be part of the first team squad this season and he has played a couple of times despite the return of Ilkay Gundogan making an already congested scrap for midfield places even more crowded. READ MORE SUN STORIESO’Reilly started in the Carabao Cup against Watford and Tottenham – and made his Champions League bow against Sparta Prague before netting in the FA Cup against Salford.He will hope there is more to come, especially after the move to London was rejected.MORE BOY WONDERSHERE are some more in our Boy Wonders series More

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    Amorim may have stumbled on to same path that fired Liverpool and Arsenal back to the top after Man Utd’s transfer gloom

    THE pressure is on Ruben Amorim after the winter window closed without any significant Manchester United incoming business.It is hard to believe Amorim really only wanted to bring in a 20-year-old left-back and a kid from Arsenal’s youth team – even if he was evidently desperate to get shot of Marcus Rashford and Antony.Ruben Amorim was unable to welcome any significant players in JanuaryCredit: GettyPatrick Dorgu was the only player to be signed for the senior teamCredit: GettyMarcus Rashford left on loan to Aston VillaCredit: GettyAntony also left Manchester United to join Real Betis until the end of the seasonCredit: AlamyFinancial issues, it seems, lay at the heart of United’s lack of serious work in the market despite a miserable season so far.Many United fans were calling on Amorim and Ineos to do more in the winter window.But perhaps out of financial necessity, rather than choice, he may have stumbled on to the same path that propelled Liverpool and Arsenal back to where they are now.To do it properly, change takes time. It is about doing it right, rather than for the sake of acting, only to have to start all over a few months later.READ MORE ON MAN UTDThe Old Trafford faithful, looking up from 13th, may not want to laud what happened at Anfield and The Emirates when those two clubs made their most important managerial changes of the past decade.Yet the initial actions of both Jurgen Klopp and Mikel Arteta, where neither opted for a grand cull and revamp in terms of personnel at the first opportunity either, maybe the example Amorim can benefit from following.What mattered, at Liverpool and Arsenal, was a cultural reset. A reboot of attitude and mentality. Led from the top, filtering all the way through the club.Exactly what is required at Old Trafford now.Most read in FootballCASINO SPECIAL – BEST CASINO BONUSES FROM £10 DEPOSITSKlopp, in particular, inherited a mess when he replaced Brendan Rodgers at Anfield in October 2015.His first side, in a goalless draw at Spurs, included Martin Skrtel, Mamadou Sakha and Alberto Moreno at the back, Emre Can and Lucas Leiva in midfield and a bench that included Jordan Ibe, Jerome Sinclair and Kolo Toure.Ruben Amorim insists Man Utd are ‘trying everything’ to improve his squad after Crystal Palace defeat Jurgen Klopp won a Champions League title with LiverpoolCredit: GettyHe turned the struggling club into one of the bestCredit: Dave Pinegar – The SunArsenal were all over the place before Mikel Arteta arrivedCredit: AlamyThe Spaniard has transformed the club into title challengersCredit: AFPKlopp’s first decision, his key one, was to alter the mindset and approach of the players at his disposal, rather than a wholesale switch of personnel.Indeed, the only player signed by Liverpool in January 2016 was Serbian midfielder Marko Grujic, immediately loaned back to Red Star Belgrade and whose Liverpool career added up to just 16 appearances across three seasons.It was not until the summer window, when 16 players – including no fewer than six in that initial match day squad at White Hart Lane – departed and Joel Matip, Sadio Mane and Georginio Wijnaldum were among the arrivals, that the Klopp player makeover began in earnest.The real work, though, had already been started off the pitch, at the training ground and in the mentality of the dressing room.Klopp made a point of learning the names of all 80 staff at the club’s Melwood base, introducing them to the players.It was a signal of intent. One club. One goal. Together – from the humblest groundsman to the star striker. A bond was created.Likewise at Arsenal, Arteta, appointed just before Christmas 2019, dabbled only in the loan market in his first window.Three in, with Emile Smith Rowe and defender Mavropanos departing temporarily.The main squad changes came afterwards. January arrivals Pablo Mari and Cedric Soares had their loans made permanent, with Brazilian defender Gabriel, Thomas Partey and Willian added.Critically, also, the clear-out was ramped up over the second and third windows, with Henrikh Mkhitarian, Mesut Ozil and defenders Sokratis and Mustafi all out by January 2021, swiftly followed by Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang.Indeed, by August 2022, less than three years after he arrived, only five of the players on his first team-sheet – Bukayo Saka, Smith Rowe, Granit Xhaka, Gabriel Martinelli and Reiss Nelson – were still in the building.Like Klopp, too, Arteta was determined to force through, no matter how uncomfortable it was, an attitudinal change.Marking his fifth anniversary at the helm in December, the Spaniard recalled: “The first thing was that I got everyone together, the staff and the players, and I told them what I thought about them and why this wasn’t working.“If we were going to continue like this, it was never going to work.”He added: “We had to get back all together with the same agenda and with the same intentions.“The foundations have to be really strong in order to create something.“We had to create the right culture for our club, an environment where, first of all, everybody has to respect each other, that we work together and express the passion at how lucky we are to be where we are.”Of course, what helped both – unlike Amorim – was evidence on the pitch.Klopp lost just one of his first 11 games at the helm, Arteta had one defeat in his initial 14 games. It built a bulwark for when things became tougher.Amorim, by contrast, lost six out his first 11 after replacing Erik ten Hag.And successes have been in short supply since then, too, adding up to eight victories in 19 matches, only four wins out of 13, plus seven losses, in the Prem.Inconsistent team selection reached another level when he opted to play Kobbie Mainoo as an effective false nine in Sunday’s shocker against Palace, leaving both Joshua Zirkzee and Rasmus Hojlund on the bench for 70 minutes.That only six of the team that started Amorim’s first match at Ipswich were in the initial side on Sunday added to that sense of uncertainty.The one major signing, Danish left-back Patrick Dorgu, is now pitched into a club that seems unsure of its next steps.READ MORE SUN STORIESAmorim will want to believe that sending Rashford and Antony out of the door, seemingly for good, is a statement to the entire squad.It will have to be. Now, though, it is down to the manager. There is no room for excuses.Jurgen Klopp’s first steps at LiverpoolHere is a look at how Jurgen Klopp started to change Liverpool…Klopp first game v Spurs Oct 2015Mignolet; Clyne, Skrtel, Sakho, Moreno; Coutinho (Ibe), Can, Milner, Lallana (Allen), Lucas; OrigiBench:Teixeira, Bogdan, Randall, Sinclair, ToureTransfers that summer:James Milner, Robert Firmino, Joe Gomez, Danny Ings, Nathaniel Clyne, Christian BentekeJanuary:Marko Grujic (straight back out on loan)Season results:Finished 8th, lost CC final to City on pens, lost europa League final to SevillaReal change in summer:In: Matip, Karius Mane, Klavan, Manninger, Wijnaldum £67.9mOut: 16 inc J Enrique, Toure, Sinclair, Canos, Toure, Teixeira, Sinclair, Skrtel, Ibe, Allen, Benteke, Balotelli, Ilori £76.5mMikel Arteta’s first steps at ArsenalHere’s how Arteta slowly transformed Arsenal…Arteta first game v Everton Dec 2019Leno; Chambers, Luiz, Maitland-Niles, Saka; Torreira, Smith Rowe (Willock), Xhaka; Martinelli, Aubameyang (Lacazette), NelsonBench:Pepe, Mustafi, Guendouzi, Mavrapanos, MartinezSeason results:8th, FA Cup winTransfers:Jan in: (loan) Ceballos, Mari, SoaresOut (loan) Smith Rowe, MavrapanosSummer:In: Mari, Soares, Willian, Gabriel, Partey Total spend £81.6mOut: Mkhitarian, Martinez Total received £28mWinter:In: (loan) Dani Ceballos, Martin OdegaardOut: Ozil, Sokratis, Mustafi More

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    Confessions of a ring girl: You get covered in blood, sweat & tears – and the way my boxer lover two-timed me was brutal

    GEMMA Jones has wowed fight fans as a ring girl for seven years and worked at around 700 events – but she has revealed it is far from the glamorous life people might think it is.From cheating boxers to wardrobe malfunctions and insane pre-fight diets, Gemma tells The Sun the truth about life in the ring. Gemma has worked as a ring girl for seven yearsShe has performed at over 700 fights and still loves it at the age of 37The stunning 37-year-old can perform at up to two events every weekend, sometimes working from 1pm until midnight.She earns up to £500 every time, covering mainly MMA, cage fighting and bare knuckle bouts – and juggles her work with being a mum-of-three and another job as a skin treatment expert.Here she lifts the lid on why the life of a ring girl is definitely not all superstars and stilettos….Why I’ll never date another boxerI’ve got a lovely boyfriend, he works in fashion and we were friends for five years before we started going out last year.But four years ago I did date a boxer for a few months until I found out in the worst way possible that he was a cheat.I love boxing and was in the audience for a fight when my friendtold me not to look behind me.I did and right behind me was my boyfriend and anotherwoman who it transpired was actually his girlfriend of years.It all kicked off and he even blamed me and tried to accuse me of causing problems – and it turned out I wasn’t the only woman he’d cheated with.While some of the boxers are lovely, others think they’re God’s gift to women and are very arrogant. I’m never going to risk getting one of the bad ones again.We’re a knockoutPart of the job description is looking great. I’m not one for make-up most of the time, but I’ll spend a good hour or more doing my hair and make-up before I go into the ring. I get my nails done regularly too and go on sunbeds.I carry a huge bag full of everything I need with me – including spare tights as they often get laddered getting into the ring.But it’s not glamorous, the big changing rooms are rightly reserved for the fighters, so sometimes we have a small dressing room, but others we’re doing it in the loos.Conor McGregor parties with his army of ring girls in club just weeks before comeback at UFC 303 vs Michael ChandleThere have been times when other girls have been sent away as they don’t look as good as their photographs.I have to look smiley even when I’ve got a huge wedgie up my bottomIt might sound awful, but I think it’s fine – the bottom line is it is about looking gorgeous in the ring. It would be like someone wanting to be an accountant who can’t do maths.I used to be a model before my best friend asked me to join her doing this. I love my job and don’t think it’s exploitative at all.There are boxers who for religious reasons don’t want us in the ring with them and that’s fine.And if there are going to be children at the show we cover up more and wear leggings rather than skimpy shorts and long sleeves.Gemma admits it’s ‘all about looking gorgeous in the ring’Suffer to be beautifulThere are days when I don’t feel my best. When I first started I used to only drink water for two days before a fight.I can’t do that any more but I’m fairly careful with what I eat. I start my day with a cup of tea, but then I drink lemon water for the rest of the day.I have a meal replacement shake and then a healthy supper. And I work out in the gym too.If I do have a day when I feel bloated, I’ll wear not one but two pairs of shapewear pants.I have to be up there looking smiley, while it feels like I’ve got a huge wedgie up my bottom.I’m just grateful we aren’t allowed to wear stilettos – there’s a worry they’d pierce the floor of the ring so we either wear block heels or trainers.Crowd pleasing… or notWe aren’t only there to announce the round they’re on. We lead in the boxers and get into the ring with them.And we get the crowd enthused, so we might blow kisses back to men who blow them at us, or go in and mingle with people who want to take selfies with us.We are often in front of an audience of over a thousand – the smallest venue I do is around 700.I’ve held the wrong number up or held it upside down, even though I never drink on the jobGenerally, they are pretty good. If women are there they are much more likely to shout abuse like calling us s**gs. I can only remember one occasion when a man shouted abuse at me, and then his girlfriend came and sat down next to him and I realised why.If that happens though, I can talk to one of the promoters and people will get removed – there’s no reason why we should put up with abuse for doing our job.Gemma has worked in most types of combat sports including MMAShe has also worked at bareknuckle bouts and cagefighting eventsBut it’s often far from glamorous, with the girls having to get ready in the toilets sometimesDanger zoneYou have to be prepared to be covered in blood, particularly at a bare knuckle fight – and then at the end you often get hugged by the fighters, and covered in sweat, and the loser sometimes ends up crying so you get soggy from their tears.I always feel sorry for the loser, they’ll have trained for months and it’s such a blow to their pride.The crowd can kick off in a fight and I’ve nearly been hit by a beer bottle.But my worst injury was during a cage fight. I was in there while they warmed up and one of the fighters accidentally pushed me and I ended up with my face pressed against the bar.The outfits are extremely revealing and risk wardrobe malfunctionsMishaps and mayhemI’ve made so many mistakes in my years. I’ve fallen down the stairs leading boxers in and got stuck getting into the ring.The first time I did it, I was so nervous. The other girl waslovely and very experienced and told me just to copy her walk. I looked like Bambi on ice skates, but I soon got used to it and now sashay like a pro.I’ve also held up the wrong number for the round, or held it upside down or even the wrong way round – despite the fact that I never drink on the job, though some girls can, it’s notgenerally forbidden.I live in fear of my boobs popping out when I bend over to get in the ring, so though I wear push up bras, I make sure they’re sturdy ones that will hold me in whatever.My other nightmare is when I’m on my period – our bottoms are so skimpy we cut the strings off our Tampax so they can’t accidentally be seen.For the love of itUnless you’re an absolute top ring girl, there isn’t a lot of money in it.I top up my income by being an aesthetics practitioner, though I don’t do my own Botox and lip fillers.Some ring girls are with agents, but my best friend and I have got great contacts so we sort our own bookings and I could work every weekend if I wanted to.If you use an agency, you might get to the bigger fights, but there’s loads of competition.And of course your agent takes a big slice of your money and you don’t get much unless it’s a massive fight.I usually get paid between £120 and £500. And the vast majority of ring girls are on the same as me.But I love doing the job, so don’t have any plans to give up.And though I’m 37, I’m by no means the oldest ring girl – some do it well into their 40s.It’s a huge buzz standing in the ring with everyone cheering and clapping and the atmosphere is great.And I’ve been doing it for so long that I’m friends with some of thepromoters and even the boxers. One of them I know really well and he finds it funny to lick my face after he’s won. And I love boxing too.Gemma juggles her ring girl work with another job and raising three girls, including Kacy, who is disabledFriends of daughter Caitlan, left, tease her about her ‘foxy’ mumGemma, with youngest daughter Olivia, says her kids are her ‘everything’Kid glovesLike any working single mum it’s a constant juggling act. But I’m incredibly lucky with their fathers.Caitlan, 18, and Kacy, 16, have the same father and Olivia, 10, has another one, but both dads are brilliant.And their mums have always been happy to help too – they have “nan fun” weekends. I’ve been estranged from my own mum though since I was 11 so she’s not part of their lives.I find it funny that my daughter’s friends found my Instagram and always go on about me being foxySome promoters are happy for your kids to come along, but I’ve never done that.The crowds can get unruly and I don’t want to risk their safety, however unlikely it is that they’d be hurt.But I have always made quality time for them, they are my everything and when I’m there, I’m 100 per cent present for them.I have them all through the week and try to have one weekend amonth with them. And if they are ever ill or need me, I’ll cancel my work to be with them.Kacy is disabled. She was 10 weeks premature and at six weeks old she got septicaemia and meningitis.So we have carers that help with her as she needs someone with her 24 hours a day.I don’t know whether Caitlan or Olivia will follow in my footsteps and be ring girls – at the moment neither of them are keen, but they think it’s a “cool” job.I find it funny that Caitlan’s friends found my Instagram and always go on about me being foxy.She isn’t embarrassed though, she’s good at banter and gives as good as she gets.Party timeI’m friendly with some of the boxers and know their ways.For example some of them hate being spoken to before a fight – they’re getting in the zone and focusing only on the fight. Others are nervous and want to chat.I’m actually really boring – I barely drink and have got three daughters, so I’m not up for partying after a fight. I’m usually knackered from all the adrenaline and often have a three-hour drive home to Wrexham from the fight.You do hear about wild parties and girls targeting boxers. But I don’t really experience that scene, the most I’ve done is go for a couple of drinks afterwards.And generally speaking, these men are athletes who don’t want to undo all their hard training by getting legless.At the end of the day we’ve all worked hard and want to get home to our beds… alone!Gemma doesn’t use an agent but still earns up to £500 a showGemma, on the right, said she is friends with some of the fighters but would never date one again More