Vincent Kompany

Burnley boss Vincent Kompany’s verdict on Everton defeat

The only goal came on the stroke of half time when Aro Muric’s clearance was charged down by Dominic Calvert-Lewis and deflected into the net. Dara O’Shea was sent off in the second half after bringing down Dwight McNeil just over the halfway line. “The letter of the law says he should have been denying a goalscoring opportunity to be sent off and I’ll let you guys make your judgement on that,” said Kompany. “There was a lot of force on the ball and it would be a comfortable pick up for the goalkeeper.” The result leaves the Clarets six points from safety, but Kompany refused to pin the blame on his goalkeeper. “He has to keep going. It is part of being a professional footballer. We all live with the mistakes we make, it happens for everyone in life and in football it is no different,” he added. “Our momentum collapsed twice through moments of our own doing. But I can’t for one second criticise the effort of the team and the idea to come here and play like this.”
Rob Edwards

Hatters duo declared fit for Burnley as Hatters boss Rob Edwards vows to manage injuries #LutonTownFC

Watch more of our videos on Shots!and live on Freeview channel 276Visit Shots! nowHatters boss Rob Edwards has been given a selection boost ahead of tomorrow night’s Premier League clash at home to Burnley with both Tom Lockyer and Reece Burke having been declared fit.The pair started Saturday’s 2-1 win over Everton at Goodison Park, following the half time whistle, Burke didn’t reappear for the second period, replaced by Danish centre half Mads Andersen.Then with 10 minutes gone of the second period, Lockyer was also forced off having taken a blow to the face before the break, his eye starting to swell up fairly badly, Teden Mengi on for his Premier League debut.Tom Lockyer goes off injured against Everton on Saturday - pic: Lewis Storey/Getty ImagesDespite the much-changed back-line, Luton still managed to secure their first three points of the season, but ahead of a home match with a winless Clarets on Tuesday night, there is every chance both will feature, as Edwards said “We’re okay, we had a couple of knocks and made two changes, were forced into a couple of changes at the weekend."Both Burkey and Locks have come through today so that’s good news for us."They’ll be okay, no fresh injury worries from the weekend, so the squad will be the squad that it was from Saturday.”Burke’s stint at Luton has been blighted by injury at times, as in his first two years, he has never begun more than six league games in a row.Saturday was his fifth successive start in the top flight this term, as Edwards knows keeping him fit will be a huge shot in the arm for the Hatters’ chances of staying up, continuing: “His groin was sore, he’s seen a few people over the last couple of days, so he’s all right."It’s just that groin area, but he’s seen someone this morning and got the all-clear, it’s just going to be a little bit sore."He trained today, no problem, so that was a big plus.“He’s been excellent, he’s a really good player and an important player for us as well.”Monitoring the former West Ham United and Hull City centre back will now be key to ensure his body can withstand a full campaign in the Premier League, with Edwards adding: “We don’t want to lose him for a period of time, so it’s just something we’re going to have to manage over the next week or so, get through to the international break and then we can get a little bit of work into him."What he does, he puts every ounce of it into everything, every day."Sometimes you want to say ‘Burkey, just be steady, slow down, just chill out a little bit and manage yourself.’"But I’d rather be doing that and rein people in than kick them up the backside and get them to work hard."He’s just a really good pro and he’s an important player for us.”
Vincent Kompany

#PLStories – Burnley boss Vincent Kompany on upcoming Manchester United test #BurnleyFC

United lost 4-3 to Bayern Munich in the Champions League on Wednesday night to continue an early-season slump which has already seen them lose three of their opening five Premier League fixtures. With off-field issues also mounting for Ten Hag, the pressure will be on United to deliver a result at Turf Moor, but Kompany is interested only in his own players. “I only try and assess (United) in a way that I need to do for my team, their strengths and weaknesses,” he said. “I’ve been in a big club before and I know what it is when you lose a couple of games. Pressure can mount but it’s not for me to talk about them. I focus on the pitch… “We’re not busy with what is happening at the other team, that doesn’t concern us. I have to myself manage the results of our team and the performances. “I think we’re a calm camp, we’re at a place where we feel there is something really exciting ahead of us and we want to build on that moment. Everything that happens elsewhere is not our concern.” Kompany is looking to build on the positive signs shown in Monday’s 1-1 draw at Nottingham Forest, Burnley’s first point of the season and one that could have been all three but for a contentious VAR decision that ruled out Lyle Foster’s late strike for a handball by Sander Berge. After three consecutive home defeats to Manchester City, Aston Villa and Tottenham, the draw was a welcome step forward. “We’ve had three games against three of the top eight sides in the league and the gap has always been there,” Kompany said. “Against Forest we felt we were on an even playing field. Now it’s up to us to close the gap to the teams at the top. “I’m really looking forward to this game to see if we’ve made those steps forward. I really believe in the attacking threat in our team in terms of being able to create something and I hope that shows on Saturday.” Although Burnley’s first season back in the top flight began with three straight home games – a situation caused by the postponement of their trip to Luton in August – they were thrown in at the deep end, with the reigning champions first to visit before Villa and Spurs. Even given United’s troubles, Saturday’s 8pm kick-off appears no easier, and Kompany knows his side need to deliver more consistency over the course of a full match. “I really want (Turf Moor) to become a difficult place for any team to come,” he said. “At this moment in time when we have played against teams of the calibre of United it’s fair to say we haven’t been able to put in a 100-minute performance. “We’ve always had a threat, good spells, but we’ve got punished in spells when we weren’t at our best. “For us it’s looking at this game and saying, ‘Can we step it up and get a result against one of the best teams in the league?’. Burnley will need to do that without Foster, who has scored two of their four Premier League goals so far this season. The South African saw red late on at the City Ground on Monday and starts a three-game suspension. “We’ve built a decent squad and there’s a few players I’d like to see anyway,” Kompany said. “It’s for someone else now to step into those shoes, give it their own flavour and hopefully it pays off on the day.”
Gao Jisheng Southampton Owner

#PLStories- Southampton owners on relegation, club plans and more #SAINTSFC

If you have subscribed to the Daily Echo on the back of it, thank you very much for your support. The interview produced over 4,000 words of direct quotes from Dragan Solak, Rasmus Ankersen and Henrik Kraft so we had to split it up into digestible bits over the week.  However, below is the full interview Q&A conducted with the bosses at Staplewood Campus, in their new office overlooking the main training pitch... In your view what went wrong between August and May this year?  Dragan Solak: I can say from my side that I am probably the guy who knows the least about football but how I see it, I think first of all everything that happened this year was coming in the last five years. The club didn’t have proper investment for five years and they were doing what they had to do to survive and stay in the Premier League and did a great job doing that. But every survival leaves scars that are seen or unseen on the tissue. We came in with the scars really put together and we hoped with increased investment we will be able to move the club towards where we wanted it to be. Unfortunately, it is shown you cannot buy success just as you cannot buy love! We spent a lot of money and acquired some wonderful talents but unfortunately, somehow we couldn’t create a team that was needed and all the other stuff that came up produced this very disappointing season for all of us. On the positive side of all of this, we finally have the chance for a fresh new start to reset. We intend to do that with a lot of energy and with the same confidence in the town and in the club, we are really looking forward to rebuilding this club back. Maybe after 10 years of survival, it might not be bad to have a reset, build a healthy foundation and hopefully stay in the Premier League for even longer than 10 years. Henrik Kraft: Of course, we didn’t want to get relegated. But it is an opportunity now to reset and get everything aligned with our own version, for us to get closer involved. I think we can create a winning team and I think it will be a very exciting and entertaining season for us and the fans. We will come back stronger because we will have had an opportunity to make a lot of changes, if things are going okay you don’t always make the hard decisions but now we have to so hopefully that leaves us stronger. Your initial joining statement – Henrik said: “We will be an active and engaged owner but we will not be starting any revolutions. We were attracted to Southampton because it is already a well-run club.” – Pretty much entirely new board, when did you first, and why did you feel you had to, deviate from that initial statement? HK: In the first six months, we were very much aligned with that but I think everyone knows last season finished very, very badly. We lost nine of the last 12 games and it was relegation form. It has been an attempted evolution, the changes are never easy and if you’re trying to make change at the same time as when things are not going well on the pitch, that creates its own difficulties. It’s a relatively natural outcome unfortunately of the situation we’ve been in, wanting change and wanting to change some things and drive some improvements at a time when results weren’t working. I’m not sure I’d go as far as calling it a revolution now but obviously we have had to make more changes than we initially anticipated. So many left, whose decision is it – is it theirs or has it been yours? HK: There have been a few occasions where we have lost people that we didn’t want to, everyone knows about Joe Shields who was plucked by Chelsea. There have been people who left because there was promotion or an opportunity to go to a job they didn’t get, that’s natural I think. By and large, there have been no real surprises in the changes and probably more of them have been in line with us. Everybody at the club takes their share of responsibility but how much responsibility do you accept for what happened and ultimately relegation? Rasmus Ankersen: When you are the owner of the company you need to take full responsibility no matter what, we just have to look at what happened and make sure we get things right for next season. Now that myself and Henrik are moving closer to the action ourselves, we’ll pick the team we want to run the club day to day to make sure we do everything we can to make this club a success. One of the things that lots of supporters have said to myself, they don’t feel they can fully trust the decisions made and therefore the ownership of the club, as we start to look forward then is that feeling something you’re aware of and hope to change? RA: There’s no better medicine than winning football matches. Change is difficult and when you try to do it at the same time as in a survival battle, it’s extra hard. The proof will be in the pudding, all we can say now is that – as you have seen with the changes we have made over the last month – we are preparing to make sure that the club is fully aligned from the top to the bottom. We have to do everything we can to get decisions right but the evidence will be on the pitch, at the end of the day. HK: We have to earn it… DS: I think it’s also fair to say that all three of his have history behind us that brought us to the point of being able to a Premier League club, which is not cheap or easy to do. That means we have made a lot of decisions right in the past, Rasmus has a lot of sporting success and Henrik and myself have lots of business success. This part of our journey was not marked by huge success but we are guys who are fighting, we learn from our mistakes and have tried to work out exactly where we made mistakes in order to never do them again. We are willing to continue the fight so I think supporters should have faith that we have not just woken up a year and a half ago and became completely incapable and unsuccessful people from a life of success before that. But it is a phase where we were very happy with Southampton on multiple levels and still are, but through the first season and first half season some vulnerable things showed and some results started piling up and actually we were not able, together with the team, to answer why. We saw the team not really functioning, there was all this talk about the striker that was missing but at the time we had Armando Broja who was still playing for us and something was missing. This is really complex business where you can spend £100million on players or several hundred like Chelsea and somehow still not put them in a functional team. There are smart people there but it will probably take time for them, I’m sure they will come back stronger because the talent they have is unbelievable – but even they couldn’t put a functioning team together. It’s a very touchy business where we have to be very precise but believe me we have done a lot of thinking about everything that went right and wrong and are 100 per cent dedicated. I’m not saying we are not going to make mistakes again but we are 100 per cent dedicated to not making the mistakes again. Unfortunately, we can only ask now for a bit of faith and hopefully the results on the pitch can rebuild faith in us – that’s the only way to prove you are right or wrong in football, win or lose games. Do you think that hiring two inexperienced managers in Nathan Jones and Ruben Selles was a gamble and was it a regret or a mistake?   RA: There’s always risk and when you recruit a manager, it is not like recruiting a player in a set transfer window and often you’re not playing games. You almost always recruit a manager under time pressure, either because someone headhunts your manager because they have done well and you have limited time to find a replacement, or when you need to let go of your manager because you’re not happy and need to find someone who can do a better job. There is always an element of risk. The narrative about a manager is always a simple one but there are multiple things that have caused the fact we’ve been relegated, not just one factor. We think that there was a logical rationale to the appointments at the time but they clearly didn’t work out. It was not that nobody thought about how we would turn around the situation. DS: It was easier for me because I was not involved with all the football talks, but I was involved in the choice of manager – so I take my part of the blame. We already had Ralph (Hasenhuttl) at Southampton, who was one of the longest-serving managers in the Premier League. We had a very experienced, high-level, proven Premier League manager, and then he started failing. I think Ralph is an extremely smart and honest person but you could see some kind of energy was not getting out of him anymore, when we were looking into this we wanted a change – we didn’t think that another long-serving manager of the Premier League was a change. What I saw in Nathan was pure energy that we needed, aggression in defence and offence, a guy that would make pitbulls out of our players. He proved he could do this in Luton but for whatever reason, he could not turn our squad that way, maybe it was the players he just didn’t get across and his system didn’t work. He was inexperienced as a manager in the Premier League, and maybe the pressure and presence is at a different level and can break many people who are not used to that. I don’t feel sorry for us, I feel sorry for him. If I could not do it, I would – I would be the happiest guy if Nathan would actually be the hero of Luton Town, got his promotion to the Premiership and actually became a Premier League manager by promotion. He had a lot of faith that he could do good things with us and it damaged his career as well, not only our club but himself. Having to sit at home and watch the team he practically created get promotion to the Premier League, it’s unbelievable. You can make a very emotional movie out of that. I feel very sorry in part for not enhancing his career, he is a good guy and an honest guy but perhaps wasn’t the right fit. As Rasmus says, sometimes you have a limited time frame to decide and he looked like the right fit from all the stuff we knew about him. What about the Ruben Selles appointment, with still over a third of the season to go? RA: At that time, we were not in a great position obviously and within the club there was a feeling it was important to go back to something familiar. One of the issues we have had is that Southampton, over the last few years, has been recognised as having a very well defined style of play and that has brought the maximum out of the players. That started slipping last season and it started to look like a team without an identity, and that carried on into the new season. We didn’t look like a team with clear principles of play, Nathan came in to try and fix some of the more immediate issues we had. For example, aggression and we had been very poor on set plays, Nathan had a great record at Luton on that, and being a team that was on the front foot and being aggressive without the ball. When that didn’t have an impact, the feeling was it was important to go back to something most of the players were familiar with, the 4-2-2-2 system. When you are under pressure you tend to go back to default setting and we felt like we should support that, there was a feeling of going back to something familiar in the building. That didn’t work, clearly. James Ward-Prowse and Theo Walcott both told me there was not enough experience in the playing group, do you agree with them and is it something that you feel you have to learn from? RA: Whenever you lose, the explanation or reason that tends to come out is that you lack leaders or experience, if you go to Leeds and Leicester now they may say the same thing. In the summer there was a fatigue within the team in relationships between some of the senior players and management, we – together with the management team – had to make some decisions on what direction we wanted to go. The conclusion was that Ralph had done a great job and deserved now to be backed with increased investment, that also meant we needed a refreshment of the squad to turn the curve upwards again. That meant some of the more experienced players – who were not playing at the end of the season, and big characters can be good when they play but bad when they are not. But we recognise that we probably didn’t get the squad balance quite right, whether that means we should have added more experienced players it’s hard to tell. Overall, we signed some amazing players, we have some great growth and frankly some of our best players this season have been some of the young guys and fans have enjoyed watching them. The squad balance and the identity of the team we didn’t quite get right and there is definitely an element of balancing experiencing and youth that could probably have been better. What is the plan to bring the club back to the Premier League? RA: The number one thing for us is to now create full alignment from top to bottom. We know how we want to play on the pitch, we have a coach who can execute that and we have a director of football overlooking that appointment and who can get the players we need to play that style, and we will support as much as we can from above. That alignment needs to be right and if we can get that right then we have a major building block for success. Jason Wilcox hire – what attracted you to him and what do you expect from him this season and beyond? RA: Southampton’s DNA is developing talent and if Manchester City’s academy is not the best in the world, then it is definitely up there. Jason is not a guy who has been there for two years, he has been there for 10 years and really built it. First of all, that DNA and belief in young players and track record of developing footballers is always going to be an important part of being a director of football at Southampton. On top of that, Jason has a playing career and knows what it takes playing at the highest level, and if you have the chance to meet him he is very competitive, a great leader and we think this is something that we need – somebody who can bring day-to-day leadership in line with where the club wants to go. Is it accurate to say he will be the link between manager and board, and he will play a significant role in recruitment, alongside a new appointment? RA: He will have day-to-day contact with the head coach and we will be here more often. We will have a presence here but that is mainly to support everyone and show that Sport Republic is behind the club and wants you to be successful. We want to support them but won’t be here executing day-to-day operations, that is their job to do. Jason will support the manager every day, be involved in key decisions and make sure we have that alignment. Russell Martin hire – another young, up-and-coming manager, what is it about Martin’s achievements that tell you he’s the man to provide promotion? RA: You’ve asked the question in a clever way but we will have to disappoint you. I think it would be inappropriate to talk about a new manger before they are appointed. DS: There will be time to discuss the new manager when it is confirmed and we will be happy to do so as we owe it to supporters and to you, particularly after our unsuccessful choices. What I can say is that the new manager, the suggestion and the analysis and the reason why will come predominantly from Jason, not from us, because he is the new director of football. We hope to be consulted and to be involved in decision-making but we truly believe in the people we will give power to run the club and will do everything we can to support them and enable them to do better. Then we will come to the game like everybody else and hope to see our team winning! RA: What we want to do with Sport Republic is build a larger system of clubs and fuel player development through that. We have enough on our plate building that and that is our focus, then we will support the director and management team here and at the other clubs. Clearly, this is our flagship club, so we will give whatever attention it needs to be successful. How much influence will the manager have on matters beyond the pitch? RA: You don’t want to sign a player the head coach doesn’t want. There is a lot of waste there, so that is one part. But on the other hand, people from the outside sometimes forget that being the head coach is a hard job and they don’t have much time to watch players and that is why have a big scouting team that doesn’t do anything else but find the right players. The head coach is very important in identifying the type of player we want and the final process when we have three candidates, he can help choose which one he prefers. Jason will overlook this and it’s a collaborative effort. DS: He is always capable of staking his desires but they have to be checked over and there has to be a discussion and a joint decision. Nobody is going to just buy players and tell the coach, here is the team! He needs to like the players and know their role in the team. We will not send him a bus load of players, it’s not one man’s decision but it is in the domain of Jason, the manager, their team and scouts and us on the transfer committee. RA: You want to have multiple views on a player to make sure every stone is turned. It’s a big operation, modern football. There is a whole system that operates that. HK: The goal is to win the Championship, the goal is very clear, the goal is to get promoted. We are trying to shape the organisation to make sure it is fit for purpose and absolutely achieves that goal. I think we will have a lot more resources in reality than most of our competitors this season so we are in a very good position. If it doesn’t happen this year, hopefully it happens next year. We will continue to build, and a lot of the young players we brought in are getting better. That is one of the big advantages of the youthful nature of our recruitment, a lot of the players are getting better as they progress in their careers. You mention recruitment, how tough was January for you – you didn’t get the impact you needed? RA: January is always very tough, it is tough from a financial perspective. Nobody wants to lose their best players in January, players need to hit the ground running – it’s tough when there is no pre-season, so there is always risk on recruitment. I think a couple of the players like Alcaraz and to an extent Sulemana have done well, but there have clearly been some mishits where the players haven’t had an impact for one reason or another. DS: We also changed the game model unfortunately, we did the January window and then changed the manager. Suddenly the new manager came in with new ideas and those players were basically brought in like a week ago, hopefully we will not have this situation again. RA: Again this is with the alignment, January is tough, we did our best and the scouting team worked very hard. What will happen if the club are unable to win promotion back to the Premier League after multiple seasons? HK: First of all, what we have said is that we are fully committed to the club and it is a long-term project. There are other things that as Rasmus has alluded to, we are building with Sport Republic. This is to be able to create an infrastructure that actually gives us what we want long term, bringing players through in a different way so we’re not fighting on the last day of the transfer window. We believe that over two or three years we will move towards a much more sustainable business model. Obviously, we believe in the investments we have made and continue to make. RA: There will be some turnover naturally because the squad is too big but there are some very talented football players in that group which we will be intending to keep. I think it’s more an exciting job for them, if I was the manager that looked into the dressing room I wouldn’t be too worried. What’s the best Saints can hope for under Sport Republic? RA: I don’t think we should make any big promises but what you have seen with Brighton, Villa and Brentford – these clubs have finished in the top 10 this season. If you work over a number of years with a concentrated strategy and make good decisions you can punch above your weight in the Premier League. We are not going to go in and compete on money, we will invest, but that is why we are building the club network we are is to try and get the players into our system before they cost £30million. Time will tell whether that will be successful or not, whether that ends up improving the club we will see but I think there is some good evidence from other clubs that it is possible to do. There is a lot of talent there that can improve, hopefully we can get a good pre-season, play some exciting football, entertain fans and win football matches. Henrik, you referenced a gap in quality academy youngsters between 19-21 at the fans’ forum but are you now excited by the ages below? HK: There was a specific gap for whatever reason and I think the signings that have been made have been targeted to fill that gap. You look at the players coming through, it’s very exciting. We have had debuts from a number of very young players this season. I think Sam was actually the youngest and he came on and showed why, obviously Dom we have seen a couple times this season and Kami Doyle in the game before. There’s some great players coming through and we won the B team division with basically an under-18s team, a very young team that won that. Tremendous achievement. What does the Southampton way mean to you in your new vision? HK: I think the Southampton way probably means difficult things to different people, I guess we’re not too hung up on slogans whereas what the DNA of the club is, is more important to us. The DNA of the club is very much around youth development, excellence in the academy, bringing top talent through and giving people a chance. I think that resonates with everything we have tried to do and will try to do, we’re not afraid to take risks. When you give a young player a chance, that’s taking a risk. There’s another a slogan at Southampton which I like better and that is ‘be brave’. That’s really what we’re trying to maintain, that whole nature of the club combined with the amazing infrastructure we have here is what has attracted us to the club, I don’t think any of that has changed. Dragan, how important is the Saints Foundation to Sport Republic? DS: I think it’s hugely important, we believe that the club is community and a club without community doesn’t mean anything. The people who love the club and support the club are coming to the games and they are the blood flow of the club. We connect back with the Saints Foundation and we have great plans for the future of the foundation. We have to be a little bit focussed now on the football but the more success you have on the pitch, the easier it is to achieve your goals as well. I think we believe the foundation is a great thing. For me, I took this box and I was super happy to receive photos of the kids enjoying the box at the games, I was really happy that they could enjoy the games with the best food and drinks – but hopefully, they were not giving them my wine! The happy faces for me are absolutely why we work and why we do what we do, it’s hugely important to continue to support it and we hope that the building of a bigger and more successful football club will lead to a bigger Saints Foundation too. HK: It’s important to add that its work will be unaffected this year by relegation.
Tino Livramento

#PLStories- Tino Livramento wants to repay Southampton supporters and staff after return from injury #SAINTSFC

The 20 year old made his long-awaited return from an ACL injury and subsequent setbacks 392 days later during Sunday’s defeat to Brighton & Hove Albion. Saints were already down 3-1 at the time he replaced James Bree, with the club’s relegation also confirmed the weekend before. Livramento was one of Southampton’s top performers in his debut season at Premier League level last season and could be a star in the Championship. But the focus for the former Chelsea man is to keep fit and try to repay the club’s staff for the effort they have put in to reach this point. “Everyone will look at it from the outside and think returning was another mental block but for me, it’s just about coming back and playing football,” he told club media. “No matter where I’m going to be, if the manager wants me to come in and play then I’m going to come in and play. It just happened to be Brighton, the first game back that I’m available for. I’m happy that I’m back and hopefully, my fitness continues. “It’s been very difficult. I’ve had a few setbacks with the main injury I had. It’s not nice but when you’ve got a strong team and great physios, I can’t speak highly enough of them.” Livramento added: “Without them, I wouldn’t be anywhere near where I am now. I’m happy that I can now repay them by showing their hard work has paid off. I’m a footballer again! “I’m as confident as I can be. I haven’t played a lot but I think you saw when I came on I had a few actions where I was mostly defending. "It’s always nice to show you can do that stuff first before doing stuff on the ball. Hopefully, I can show the fans what I have been doing before and more. So I’m looking forward to it.”
Ruben Selles

#PLStories- Ruben Selles claims he did not know of Swansea City boss – Martin to take over relegated Southampton job #SAINTSFC

The Spaniard oversaw another defeat in the Premier League as Brighton & Hove Albion powered past the St Mary’s side 3-1 at Amex Stadium on Sunday. Reports have said Swansea City boss Martin is expected to take over from Selles, who is set to leave the club at the end of the season. However, Selles – who does not want to stay at Saints as an assistant – claimed he did not know of any links to the former Scottish international and expects to be in the dugout again next weekend. "I don't know anything. I didn't read anything. I think I just get the question everywhere I go,” he said. “It has not changed anything in my position or since we spoke on Friday. I have been respectful with the club and I have put all my knowledge into this to keep this team together and the club together. "I expect that if something goes on like that, and it happens before the Liverpool game, that they will communicate it with me in the proper way." Selles added: "I didn't know about it until Southampton’s press officer told me just before I speak with you. “I know I'm going to stay here until the Liverpool game unless something changes. If something changes it's not my decision. “It's been a hard week for us and I was focused on keeping the boys ready for today's game. I'm not worried about my future. "I know that my contract expires at the end of the season and what the club decides is up to them. I made my points known and I can't control it."
Ruben Selles

#PLStories- Southampton manager Ruben Selles does not want to reveal next move until season ends #SAINTSFC

The Spaniard, speaking ahead of the club’s penultimate game of the season at Brighton this weekend, is under contract at Saints until the end of the season. Selles revealed his intentions to continue his management career and said he will “absolutely not” stay on at St Mary’s unless he remains the boss. It had been reported elsewhere that Championship and Spanish clubs are monitoring Selles despite the club’s 11-game winless run ending in relegation. READ MORE: Selles does not want to stay at Southampton unless he is the manager  Speaking on the job he has done, Selles said: “If you want to have an all-in mentality it is not only words and that is what I did. “It was an all-or-nothing moment and I am always all. I was clear that if I took a step, it was a definite step in this club and a definite step in my career, that is why I did it. “I would not change any single second of that decision. Of course, I would change the results we have had and maybe some decisions. “If you evaluate your time then there will be things you could do better but I do not change that decision.” He added: “My agent is working on those things. I get a report every two or three days. There has been some interest, but I will not speak to anyone until I have finished the season with Southampton. “As much as the gossip is about other people it is also about me. The gossip is the gossip. I do not know the reality of those things. It is always the same and if you do not want that gossip around you, you have to win more football matches. “That is how it works and we know this. I respect the club and everybody knows it. I have a contract until the end of the season and we made it clear we will speak then. “If the club makes any decision before that then I would expect to have it communicated to me one way or another before it is made public."
Romeo Lavia

#PLStories- Southampton’s Romeo Lavia ‘grateful’ for Premier League chance #SAINTSFC

The 19 year old Belgian prodigy is among the favourites to win the Southern Daily Echo’s Player of the Season in what has been a disappointing year for the club. Lavia, who is now a full international, has been a standout performer despite relegation from the Premier League being confirmed with two games still to play. The former Anderlecht youngster joined from Manchester City last summer despite being well-liked by Pep Guardiola and Kevin De Bruyne in order to play men’s football for the first time. READ MORE: How Southampton FC's ideal starting XI should look in the Championship He faces an uncertain future with interest from the big six clubs in England, while Man City have a buy-back clause that only activates next summer – that is the club’s best chance of keeping him. Lavia, speaking to club media for the most recent matchday programme, said: “First of all, I’m really, really grateful that Southampton gave me the chance to have my first step in professional football. “Looking back, I’m really happy to have made this step here. I’ve enjoyed it so far. I’ve learned so much about the club, and honestly, I feel like part of a family. “I know most of the people around the building, and you just want to give back to them for everything they do for you during the week, and the whole year really, so that gives me the motivation to give my all for the rest of the season.” Lavia spoke to the Daily Echo in his first month at St Mary’s and gave good insight into the mentality that has taken him this far. “I don’t feel the pressure, if there is any pressure I think it is always positive as it means people expect something from you. It’s always a positive,” he told us. “It wasn’t a hard decision (to leave Manchester City for Saints), not really, because I felt ready to make the next step and to get experience in men’s football. I feel like it was the right moment. “I think just by training with the first-team at Man City, I was speaking to a lot of the first-team players and had a good connection with them. They were telling me that I was ready to play and it was up to me to move up.”
Gary O’Neil

#PLStories- AFC Bournemouth’s Gary O’Neil hails safety as a ‘big achievement’ despite loss against Crystal Palace #AFCB

Everton’s defeat to Manchester City on Sunday means there are now three teams in the Premier League unable to overhaul Cherries’ current points tally of 39. Leeds United can now only finish on 37, Everton’s potential maximum 38, whilst New Forest neighbours Southampton have already been relegated. That means Cherries can finish no lower than 17th, thus are safe from the threat of relegation. Promoted from the Championship last term following a two-year absence from the top-flight, many tipped Cherries to go straight back down. Despite an opening day win over Aston Villa, heavy defeats to the biggest hitters in the league culminated in Scott Parker’s final game in charge, a record-equalling 9-0 defeat at Liverpool. Shortly after O’Neil was installed on a temporary basis, the head coach doing enough as interim to earn the job on a full-time basis. Victory over Leeds United at the end of April ultimately proved enough for Cherries to stay up with four games spare. “It's a big achievement, no doubt,” O’Neil mused. “You saw (against Crystal Palace), if we wouldn't have been at full tilt all season and the players hadn't been given absolutely everything, that is how the Premier League can treat you, ruthless. “Crystal Palace made us look like a team that was struggling. So the boys have given everything for the whole season, suffered some real tough blows, managed to pick themselves up and go again. “A lot of hard work gone in, from players and staff and, yeah, that's how we achieved it, really. “That's how we achieved it. We got everything out of absolutely everybody that we could. “Every last drop of quality, energy, determination, managed to get it out of everyone.” However, despite his delight at staying up against the odds, O’Neil shared his “huge disappointment” at his side’s performance at Selhurst Park. Eberechi Eze was on hand to score in either half and give Crystal Palace a 2-0 win over a Cherries side that failed to muster a shot on target. He continued: “But I don’t want it to finish like (the performance against Palace). At this moment, where we are with 39 points and the fact that we're safe doesn't make me feel any better about what I saw. “Just huge disappointment, really. “At the end of the season when I’ve sat down and we’ve stayed up, and I can obviously reflect on it from a clearer point of view, but (against Palace) what I saw from a team that was put out by me, I didn't like.”  
Che Adams

#PLStories- Che Adams hints at Southampton stay after relegation is confirmed for the club #SAINTSFC

The 26 year old Scotsman has been battling injury since the March international break and has been unable to fully assist the team in their battle. Adams, who has scored five goals in the Premier League and five in cup competitions this season, missed the 2-0 defeat to Fulham after a late fitness test. After scoring in the 3-3 draw with Tottenham Hotspur in March, Adams has only played 130 minutes since – starting just once. READ MORE: How Southampton's excitement unwrapped to become relegation disaster Posting his statement on Twitter, Adams said: “Dear Saints, now I've processed everything, I wanted to express just how gutted I am.  pic.twitter.com/9OxWA6GDOn — Ché Adams (@CheAdams_) May 14, 2023 “This season has been the most challenging of my career and I think the same goes for everyone involved in Southampton Football Club. “We have failed and definitely fallen short of everybody's expectations and for that, I can't express how disappointed and also sorry I am.” He added: “I have given my everything for this club since I first walked through Staplewood on 1st July 2019 and St Mary's, but this year wasn't enough. “Myself and everyone at the club will learn from the mistakes we've made this season. “The last few weeks have been especially gutting not being able to help the team, as I've been struggling with an injury. Anyone that knows me, knows I don't give up or quit easily. “I've tried my hardest and pushed through the past few games as I wanted to give my everything, but it's not got better and it wouldn't be fair on the team or the fans if I'm not at 100%. “Just want to say a massive thank you to all the fans that support us each week, we'll bring the club back to where it belongs for you.”
James Ward Prowse

#PLStories- James Ward-Prowse admits Southampton standards ‘have slipped’ causing relegation #SAINTSFC

The St Mary’s side have been condemned to Championship football after a 2-0 defeat to Fulham on Saturday. There are two games remaining of the Premier League campaign but Saints cannot catch up, with eight points separating themselves and safety. READ MORE: 'I take all the responsibility for the last three months' - Selles READ MORE: Live updates as Saints are relegated Ward-Prowse, who has made 407 appearances for the club, addressed the media following the match. He said: "Disappointing. It has been coming. We knew we were in a difficult position. "We need to go away individually and as a club and assess if we've done everything we possibly could. I don't think we have and that is a shame. "I think as a team and a club overall we'll think about the season that has gone by. Have decisions been right? Have we done everything we could on a pitch?" He added: "I think we should perform at a better level than we have done. From the first day of the season until now you can tell the standards have slipped. "I have been here right through from eight years old, for all the ups and downs. I'm sure with the good people at the club it will be back in the Premier League in no time. "Over the last 10 years, we have had that kind of consistency and that has wavered. It will be testing for everybody but these are the times that make you as a player and as a club, we have done it before and we will do it again." Asked again about his future, he responded: "I'm not thinking too far ahead. We've just been relegated from the Premier League. "I'm not looking beyond tomorrow. It's about sticking together and dealing with it in the right way."
Nathan Tella

#PLStories- Nathan Tella ‘looking forward’ to Southampton return amid uncertain future #SAINTSFC

The 24 year old scored 17 Championship goals and became a fan favourite in the process as the Clarets secured promotion back to the Premier League as title-winners. Saints academy graduate Tella, who signed from Arsenal as a teenager, now faces the prospect of returning to the second division with the soon-to-be-relegated St Mary’s side. Burnley retain an interest in the forward while he is enjoying his new life, living in the north of England. Any deal struck would, however, require a sizeable fee. He has been asked about his future and could not give a definitive answer, telling BBC Radio Lancashire: “I haven’t really thought about it, I know I’m contracted to Southampton so I’m looking forward to going back there and doing pre-season. “I’m looking forward to seeing my family and friends and going on holiday with them, that’s it. It’s a very good question but one I don’t have the answer to right now.” Asked about his time at Burnley, Tella added: “Individually and as a team this season has exceeded everyone’s expectations. “When you get relegated you want to go straight back up into the Premier League. The fact we were able to do that first time and play the way we did has been an amazing feeling. “It’s a bit of a 50/50, I wanted to score goals and I’ve not been prolific growing up. Playing in a team like this they can find me and I can find them so we have scored so many goals this season, I’m happy to score but more importantly, I’ve got the winners medal.”
Gary O’Neil

#PLStories- AFC Bournemouth’s Gary O’Neil on planning for next season as relegation survival is confirmed #AFCB

Cherries’ fantastic April form has taken them away from danger, with nine points separating them from the relegation zone with three to play. A point at Selhurst Park tomorrow (kick-off 3pm) would mathematically confirm their spot in next season's Premier League. Whilst Cherries seem all but safe, O’Neil wants his side to make sure of their top-flight status. He shared: “We've got 39 points, and 39 should be enough, but until it's done, the longer it goes, the more nervous you can start to feel again. “So let's get it done officially as soon as we can, take care of it ourselves on Saturday with a point or three, and then importantly for me, the performance and trying to put a few things right that we've suffered with recently. “The main focus is getting points tomorrow, definitely, but of course, if we were on 29 points going into tomorrow's game, there would have been 100 per cent focus. “Like, we have to take something from this game, whereas now there is we are desperate to take something from this game, but next season is coming and there are things that we can start to put in place.” O’Neil has already identified the area needing the biggest improvement, with Cherries’ poor record at set pieces highlighted.   He continued: “There's been a big thing made about defensive set plays and the amount of goals we've conceded, so it has to improve by next season. “Sometimes difficult to change that in a short period of time. “Next season will come and we can't concede as many goals next season from set plays as we have this season, defending the penalty area, crosses and things. “So, a lot of work this week on trying to move things on, whereas maybe if the situation was different, maybe we'd have held off on that till the summer.” Premier League prize money is distributed in such a way that the difference between final positions is worth around £3million, with O’Neil sharing: “I'm well aware of how important it is that we finish as high as possible, but there's probably £200 million at stake next year for trying to stay up again as well. “Things that we can do now that can help us as we look at next season as well. “As always, a real focus on this game and what it needs to look like from us, but because of the work that the lads managed to do, we do come into the last few games of the season with less pressure on every result. “We can go into games, we can start to add things, maybe things that I've wanted to add that we haven't been able to because of the nature of the next game being another cup final and every point being so precious. “So the next few weeks does give us a little bit more freedom to have a look at some things as well as try and get results.”
Ruben Selles

#PLStories- Southampton boss Ruben Selles shares insight into next steps following relegation #SAINTSFC

Monday night’s 4-3 defeat at Nottingham Forest all-but confirmed Saints’ relegation with Selles’s side now eight points adrift with just three games to go.  Failure to beat Fulham on Saturday would officially curtail Saints’ 11-season stay in the top flight and boss Selles has provided insight into how the club could react to that eventuality.  "The club will present an agenda in the coming days or weeks on how they are going to deal with the situation in case that happens," Selles said following the slender defeat at the City Ground. "And that's for the club to respond on that. "I can tell you what we did until this moment right now and what we are going to do for the next week - we are going to just keep working as much as we can, and then keep the situations for the future, for the people that need to be responsible for that.” It’s been a tough spell for Selles who stepped into the managerial role after Nathan Jones was sacked following just eight games in charge. After winning two of his first three games, Selles has now overseen a ten-match winless run, Saints’ longest of the season. The Spaniard’s contract expires at the close of the current campaign and addressing his own future, the Saints manager said: "I expected to win more football matches. "And I think we put some good performances in to do that. And it's a decision that the club need to make. I will be happy to be here for the next ten years, as I say many times to you. But it's not for me to make a decision."
Dominic Solanke Bournemouth

#PLStories- AFC Bournemouth’s Dominic Solanke on finding form at right time #AFCB

A return of 15 points from seven games in April has seen Cherries all but confirm their place in next season's Premier League, with an nine-point gap over the bottom three with three games remaining. Solanke himself was in fine form during last month, scoring three goals and assisting three more as he was nominated for the Premier League player of the month award. Appearing on Match of the Day X, Solanke shared: “The main goal was to stay in the Premier League. “We’re pretty much there now, which is good, but when you get to that point of the season, you just know that it's like now or never. “So I think everyone's done their work, the players, the management staff, the staff behind the scenes, everyone's just come together. “We hit form at the right time. Towards the end is where you want to be on form. And we found that.” After a heart-breaking late loss at then league leaders Arsenal, Cherries returned to Vitality Stadium and defeated one of Solanke’s former clubs, Liverpool. “That Liverpool win was a massive one for us,” restarted the former Liverpool and Chelsea man. “Obviously, beating a team of that stature just gives us ultimate confidence, really.” Joint leading goalscorer with Phil Billing on seven goals, Solanke has also turned into a key provider for his teammates, setting up a further seven. “I think my game has always been like that,” he continued. “Obviously, being a striker, everyone always looks at the goals, but not many people really look at the other side of the game. “I think my game is a lot more than just goals. I think I bring a lot to the team, and especially this season, that shows that in the amount of assists I've managed to rack up.”
James Ward Prowse

#PLStories- James Ward-Prowse accepts responsibility but points to Southampton mistake at start of season #SAINTSFC

The 28 year old cut a frustrated figure as he chatted through Monday’s 4-3 defeat at a sodden City Ground, Nottingham Forest. Ward-Prowse converted an added-time penalty after having set up Lyanco with a corner-kick delivery at the start of the second half but Saints could not salvage a result. The defeat leaves them eight points adrift of safety with only nine more to play for – relegation could be confirmed as early as this weekend. READ MORE: Orsic nearing exit to bring to end puzzling Southampton transfer saga Ward-Prowse, who admitted he does not know where his future lies next season as he told the Daily Echo his focus is on the remaining games, assessed how the club have reached rock bottom. Obviously, a disappointed captain as James Ward-Prowse insists his focus is on "giving my all for the club – which I always have done".But he says "what happens beyond, who knows? I don’t know." A side note sadly but very good performance from him at City Ground. #SaintsFC — Alfie House (@AlfieHouseEcho) May 9, 2023 “Ultimately it is players on the pitch that reflect where the club is,” he said. “But we all know the changes that happened at the start of the season have had an impact. “They have had an impact going into the season in terms of where we are as a group with the players we lost and the players we brought in.” Saints doubled down on their policy of signing talented young players to replace experienced leavers such as Fraser Forster, Oriol Romeu and Nathan Redmond. The St Mary’s side have been beaten by one goal in all but one of their meetings versus relegation rivals in 2023, just not exhibiting enough to get over the line in key moments. They have also suffered definitive physical breakdowns in young players such as Romeo Lavia, Armel  Bella-Kotchap, Juan Larios and Tino Livramento over the last 13 months. “Of course, the young players we have brought in are going to have fantastic futures and we are all hoping that they will do,” Ward-Prowse added. “But equally the players that we lost and the experience that we lost in the dressing room, and not just on the pitch, did take an effect and has led us to where we are now. “We gave away two sloppy goals, pulled a goal back and to concede four goals says a lot about where we are as a team. “We know the situation we find ourselves in. It is not over until it is over. I don’t think it is any different to the previous weeks. “We know we have to take maximum points now and hope results go the right way. That is our focus going forwards now.” Ward-Prowse also addressed some interesting full-time scenes at City Ground after the defeat, which saw Saints players standing rooted to the spot staring blankly back at their supporters. Many of the travelling contingent applauded their players while others made their feelings known with a season in the Championship next campaign almost a guarantee. “There was a lot of frustration. As players you feel the responsibility of why the club is where it is,” Ward-Prowse explained. “Decisions can be made off the pitch about personnel or managers but ultimately it is you as players going out to deliver on the pitch in those fine moments. “We all know the fine margins of the Premier League. Right from day one of pre-season we have not done that as a club. Not just the players, but as a club and that is why we are where we are.”
Ruben Selles

#PLStories- Southampton boss Ruben Selles after defeat by Nottingham Forest: ‘I think the boys showed character’ #SAINTSFC

Despite a promising start, Saints gave themselves a mountain to climb when sloppy defending allowed the hosts to take a two-goal lead inside 21 minutes. Charly Alcaraz’s fourth goal since his January move gave Saints a lifeline but Forest regained their two-goal advantage shortly before half-time when Morgan Gibbs-White slotted home from the penalty spot. READ MORE: Selles told 'calm down' by former Premier League man amid 'anxious' pitchside antics On a back-and-forth night at the City Ground, Saints made it 3-2 six minutes into the second half as Lyanco headed in his maiden goal for the club. But once again, they were pegged back, this time Danilo finishing a superb Forest move to make it 4-2 with just over 15 minutes left to play. James Ward-Prowse then made it 4-3 deep into stoppage time with a well-taken penalty but Saints were unable to snatch a late point as they suffered their 23rd defeat of the Premier League season to fall eight points adrift of safety with eight games remaining. And speaking after the match, Selles was full of praise for the way in which his side approached the game while pointing to the flurry of individual errors that cost them a chance of taking all three points. "It was really hard. It's really hard for us, that result,” the Spaniard said. “To control the game in the very beginning, we came here with a clear idea what to do. And then in two situations, we gave away two goals.  “And then it's always a situation to fight back into the game. I think we did it. I think we stayed in the game. I think we saw the togetherness, the work, the things that we want to do, but it's really difficult when we give away the situations like we did today. Saints are now winless in their last ten Premier League matches. (Image: PA) "We fought back in the game, we scored the goal. The last action in the first half was a penalty again, in a situation that we need to defend better and then it's always difficult.  “But I think the boys showed character. They wanted to come back, they wanted to play and we were in the game at 3-2. We had some chances and then again, we gave a goal away and again we had the character to come back and put the ball under pressure but there was not enough time." The bank holiday defeat marked the 13th occasion that Saints have been beaten by one goal in the Premier League this season. It once again displayed Saints’ ability to stay competitive before folding in the crucial moments. "Well, I think we need to be more robust in the way that we get the game,” Selles told the Daily Echo of why he feels this trend of single-goal defeats has continued all season.  “We need to be more competitive, we need to want it because as you say, it's just those details, it is just one goal.  “It is not anybody that played better than us and was dominant against us. It is actually the opposite because I think we had a good first part of the game and I think in a lot of moments we were in control. "But those key moments that we need to defend better as a team, those key moments are when you control better. And then we emphasised that but unfortunately it happened again today."