Better than Barron: Clement must now unleash Rangers’ "quality" talent

How do Rangers salvage this season, and how does Philippe Clement keep his job?

Having been ignominiously dumped out of the Scottish Cup by Queen’s Park last Sunday, defeated in that competition by lower-league opposition at Ibrox for the first time ever, the Light Blues are staring down the barrel of a trophyless season.

The Gers are 13 points adrift of run-away Premiership leaders Celtic, a gap that will be insurmountable, but Sunday’s trip to Tynecastle still feels must-win, as Clement fights to remain in situ, ahead of Rangers’ Europa League last 16 tie coming up on 6 March.

So, could the Belgian claim the victory he so badly needs by unleashing a highly-rated teenage midfielder?

Rangers' midfield issues

As noted by former Celtic defender Charlie Mulgrew, midfield has been a problem area for Rangers throughout this season.

Clement has primarily deployed three different options at the base of midfield this season, so let’s assess their stats.

Rangers midfielders 2024/25 comparison

Statistics

Mohamed Diomandé

Connor Barron

Nicolas Raskin

Appearances

38

33

32

Minutes

2,831

2,251

2,394

Goals

5

0

1

Assists

4

2

4

Big chances created

6

0

1

Tackles per 90

1.6

2.4

3.5

Interceptions per 90

0.8

1.2

1.2

% of ground duels won

52.5%

52.1%

55.1%

Average Sofascore rating

7.06

6.88

7.20

Statistics courtesy of Transfermarkt and Sofascore

As the table outlines, Mohammed Diomandé and Nicolas Raskin have been Rangers’ best-performing midfield duo this season.

The former boasts the best attacking statistics, goals, assists and big chances created, while the Belgian shines for defensive metrics, namely tackles, interceptions and duels.

Thus, it’s no surprise that this has been Clement’s starting duo for the last five Premiership and Europa League matches they’ve both been available for; Diomandé was suspended for the trip to Old Trafford last month.

Thus, this means Connor Barron has been the man to miss out, generally performing the poorest of the three, reflected by the fact he has the worst return for goals and assists, as well as big chances created.

Chalkboard

Earlier this season, after making the move from Aberdeen, Barron was earning rave reviews, most notably named the club’s player of the month for September.

Meanwhile, a report by BBC Sport noted he made a “promising start to his Rangers career”, with Peter Cassidy of STV describing him as “one of the few shining lights at Ibrox this season”.

However, the 22-year-old has not featured in any of Rangers’ last four Premiership fixtures due to a medial collateral ligament injury sustained during a collision with Manchester United’s Matthijs de Ligt, and the date of his return is as yet unknown.

So, currently short of midfield options, should Clement turn to a teenager at Tynecastle?

The Rangers starlet who Clement must unleash

Against Queen’s Park in last Sunday’s ill-fated Scottish Cup tie, 18-year-old Bailey Rice, who Ben Mattinson on Twitter describes as a “quality midfielder”, was handed his full-senior debut.

However, it didn’t last long, with Rice hooked at half time, a substitution that former Hearts and Hibs midfielder Michael Stewart, speaking on Premier Sports’ Scottish Football Social club, described as a “deplorable decision”, adding that Rice “did not deserve to be taken off”, with Darrell Currie saying that he hopes the youngster does not feel like a “scapegoat”.

On top of this, former Rangers defender Alan Hutton believes Rice is “ready” to start contributing at first-team level, adding that he was impressed by the teenager when he was introduced at halftime against Man United, following Barron’s injury.

Teammate Ianis Hagi has also praised the youngster’s “mentality”, so we’re advocating for Clement to put Rice back into the team at Hearts on Sunday, if the Gers are to claim the three points they so desperately require in Gorgie.

Tipped for success at such a young age, the signs point to the teenager emerging as an even bigger talent than the stricken Barron, with it set to be an interesting tussle in the centre of the park over the coming years.

Rangers loanee who left in 2022 is now worth 2421% more than Lyall Cameron

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Ben Gray

Feb 14, 2025

Tamim Iqbal reverses retirement decision after meeting Bangladesh PM

He will return to action after taking a six-week break to recuperate from his injuries

Mohammad Isam07-Jul-2023Tamim Iqbal has withdrawn his retirement a day after announcing it in emotional circumstances in Chattogram, following an intervention by Bangladesh Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina. Their meeting took place on Friday afternoon at her residence in Dhaka. Tamim, accompanied by his wife, met Hasina alongside former captain Mashrafe Mortaza and BCB president Nazmul Hassan.The turnaround ultimately came on Friday afternoon but ESPNcricinfo learned of the meeting as early as Thursday evening. It is understood that Mashrafe, a member of parliament, started the process around that time when he spoke to the prime minister to possibly intervene in this situation. Tamim had, until then, refused to discuss his retirement with Hassan.An eventful 78 hours

Tuesday, 12pm: In a pre-match press conference, Tamim says he’s not fully fit and wants to test his fitness by playing 1st ODI
Wednesday, 9am: publishes an interview of Nazmul Hassan, where he calls Tamim unprofessional for the statement on his fitness
Wednesday, 10.30pm: Bangladesh lose the first ODI against Afghanistan
Thursday, 1.30am: Tamim informs media he will address a press conference on Thursday afternoon.Thursday, 1.30pm: Tamim announces his retirement from international cricket
Thursday, 8pm: ESPNcricinfo learns a meeting between Tamim and Bangladesh’s Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina is being arranged
Friday, 6pm: Tamim announces he has reversed his decision to retire following the PM’s intervention.

Tamim made the retirement announcement on Thursday afternoon. In a live TV broadcast, he broke down several times while delivering a 13-minute monologue about his decision. It captured the airwaves and social media for the rest of the day.A different Tamim spoke to the media on Friday evening outside the Prime Minister’s residence. He revealed that he had been given a break of six weeks to recuperate from his injuries.”The honourable Prime Minister invited me to her residence this afternoon,” Tamim said. “We had a long discussion after which she instructed me to return to cricket. I am withdrawing my retirement.Related

Tamim Iqbal announces retirement from international cricket

Shakib among contenders for Bangladesh's ODI captaincy

Tamim to travel to Dubai and UK to get back injury checked

Tamim Iqbal retires three months before World Cup

Did Nazmul Hassan's comments precipitate Tamim Iqbal's retirement?

“I can say no to anyone but it is impossible to say no to the most important person in the country. Mashrafe called me while Papon [Hassan] was here. They were big factors [in the reversal]. The Prime Minister has also given me a break of a month and a half. I will complete my treatment and return to playing cricket.”BCB chief Hassan said he knew a solution was around the corner, and was relieved to have been able to sit with Tamim and convince him to reverse his decision. “Having seen his press conference [on Thursday], I knew that he was being emotional about his decision,” Hassan said. “I knew that if we could sit face-to-face, I could find a solution.”We sat with him through the Prime Minister, and he just told you that he is withdrawing the retirement letter. He is not retired. He has taken a break of six weeks when he will undergo rehab and get ready physically and mentally. He will return to cricket soon.”Asked if he is relieved, Hassan said: “Of course we are relieved. How can we play without our captain?”Tamim, who made his retirement announcement a day after leading Bangladesh in the first ODI against Afghanistan, will not feature in the rest of the series. Litton Das has been appointed captain for the remaining matches on July 8 and 11.

Phoenix eliminated as Rockets keep title defence alive

Spinners, Sams strangle middle order as Phoenix run chase falls flat

ECB Reporters Network19-Aug-2023Trent Rockets boost their own title defence and eliminated Birmingham Phoenix, thumping them by 46 runs in the final Hundred Men’s match of the season at Trent Bridge, watched by a record crowd of 15,551.Offspinner Matt Carter (2 for 15) and Australia allrounder Daniel Sams (3 for 17) stood out with the ball as Phoenix could muster only 116 for 9 despite 38 off 22 balls from Jamie Smith in response to Rockets’ 162 for 6, to which Colin Munro (34 off 17), Sam Hain (30 off 21) and Alex Hales (27 off 14) were the key contributors.The result puts Rockets on seven points, level with Southern Brave and Manchester Originals behind leaders Oval Invincibles on nine but having played a game more. Brave play Invincibles later on Saturday before they face off against Originals in Manchester next Wednesday – after Rockets wrap up away to Invincibles on Monday.

Asked to bat first, Rockets would have been pleased to put 36 runs on the board from the opening 25 balls albeit for the loss of two big batting forces in Hales and Joe Root – again opening with Dawid Malan relegated to the bench.Hales at least got a start after an indifferent tournament by his own standards, but after a positive if streaky 27 off 14 balls, he dragged a Kane Richardson slower ball on to his stumps, after which Root perished to a steepling top-edge taken by the bowler as he tried to propel Adam Milne (2 for 24 from 20) over midwicket.Tom Kohler-Cadmore holed out to long-on as Rockets reached the halfway point at 72 for 3. Munro, looking for his second half-century of the competition, cleared the ropes off Tanveer Sangha, Moeen Ali and Benny Howell. But Rockets suffered a double setback with Hain and then Munro gone in the space of nine balls, Hain caught on the deep point boundary as he went to uppercut Milne before Munro miscued Howell to widish cover.Yet Sams, Lewis Gregory and Luke Wood maintained Rockets’ momentum as the last 30 balls added 53, Sams picking out Will Smeed at deep midwicket after a valuable 20 off 12 balls to finish their home programme with their second highest total at Trent Bridge this year.Phoenix have been looking to Smeed to fire with the bat all through the tournament but they were frustrated again as Luke Wood’s second set saw him and opening partner Ben Duckett depart. Smeed was brilliantly run out by ‘keeper Kohler-Cadmore’s direct hit to the non-striker’s end before Duckett tried to ramp his former Nottinghamshire team-mate and found a current one lurking at short fine leg in Carter.Jamie Smith muscles one over midwicket•ECB/Getty Images

Smith hit back with 20 off Wood’s third set, including two stand-and-deliver sixes over the leg side, as Phoenix came out of the powerplay with their noses in front at 41 for 2.By halfway, though, the home side had hauled back the advantage, albeit marginal as Liam Livingstone sliced legspinner Ish Sodhi to short third to leave Phoenix 66 for 3, needing 97 more. They held a definite edge, though, when Smith fell to Carter in the next set, given out leg before on the field and upheld on review after the ball squeezed past his bat to hit him on the toe.Phoenix should have been five down in the next set, but Sams, having got his hands on the ball at deep midwicket as Moeen flicked into the leg side, could not hold it as he landed. No matter – Root held on to a sensational effort as Moeen went to pull Sams in the next set before the excellent Carter bowled Chris Benjamin for two for 15 from his 20 as the visitors stumbled to 90 for six, needing 73 from 26.Howell hit Sams to cover, Sam Cook bowled Milne and Sams took his third when, after a prolonged review, Richardson was given out caught at midwicket.

Mithali Raj's 10,000-run milestone: 'You've inspired a generation of cricketers'

She became the first Indian and the second overall to score 10,000 runs in women’s international cricket

ESPNcricinfo staff12-Mar-20211:09

Mithali Raj: ‘Women’s cricket has evolved and you need to tune your game accordingly’

It has been a long journey this for Mithali. Enroute a few milestones have been reached and crossed. Congrats @M_Raj03 for yet another accomplishment. 10,000 international runs and counting… @BCCIWomen @BCCI pic.twitter.com/BpMoem9rUF

— Anjum Chopra (@chopraanjum) March 12, 2021

Congratulations @M_Raj03 on becoming the first Indian Woman Cricketer to score 10K runs! You are not only a great ambassador and a legend of the game but you have inspired a generation of cricketers to take up our sport. Proud of you #INDWvSAW @BCCI pic.twitter.com/WHwe9qws15

— VVS Laxman (@VVSLaxman281) March 12, 2021

10,000 runs! Absolutely sensational! Many congrats Mithali Raj! @M_Raj03 pic.twitter.com/rnhX8fiYn6

— Gautam Gambhir (@GautamGambhir) March 12, 2021

@M_Raj03! #TeamIndia #BackTheBlue https://t.co/eTwP3MyNvN

— Indian Football Team (@IndianFootball) March 12, 2021

What an achievement Congratulations @M_Raj03 https://t.co/53XODrEDKR

— Chloe Tryon (@chloetryon25) March 12, 2021

Congratulations to @M_Raj03 on getting to the 10k run mark, you are a legend that continues to inspire many young ones to take up the sport. #legend #MithaliRaj #INDvSA

— Ashwin (@ashwinravi99) March 12, 2021

Mithali + Magic = Milestone. Super Queen becomes first Indian Woman Cricketer to score 10K runs! #INDvSA #MithaliRaj #WhistlePodu #Yellove – @BCCI pic.twitter.com/hsNyZgfkGA

— Chennai Super Kings (@ChennaiIPL) March 12, 2021

Many congratulations on reaching 10,000 international runs @M_Raj03 Terrific achievement, a testament to your fitness, skill and dedication towards the game #INDvSA pic.twitter.com/EnWgF5HniM

— Wasim Jaffer (@WasimJaffer14) March 12, 2021

Congratulations @M_Raj03 on completing 10,000 International runs!

A wonderful showcase of the phenomenal abilities women possess and a fine example for the younger generation! More power to you

— Yuvraj Singh (@YUVSTRONG12) March 12, 2021

Congratulations @M_Raj03 on setting new benchmarks.

— Anil Kumble (@anilkumble1074) March 12, 2021

Take a bow, @M_Raj03! What an achievement to be the first Indian woman cricketer to surpass the international 10,000-run mark. Absolute legend #MithaliRaj #INDvSA

— Jay Shah (@JayShah) March 12, 2021

As good as Palmer: Chelsea may have found their new Drogba at the CWC

Chelsea are the champions of the world. Before the final against Paris Saint-Germain, rivals all across England and beyond laughed at the thought of Enzo Maresca beating this unbeatable super-team.

But beat them Chelsea did, in fact dismantling the Parisians 3-0 at MetLife Stadium in New Jersey. PSG, having won the Champions League, Ligue 1 and the Coupe de France, were firm favourites, but they were brushed aside by an incisive and energetic Blues side.

Not a bad maiden campaign, all told, for Maresca, whose side will now rest ahead of a new term which promises so much.

Who was it, then, who inspired the Londoners to victory? Who else?

Cole Palmer, once again on the biggest stage, stood up when his team needed a talisman.

Cole Palmer's show-stopping performance vs PSG

Crowned the Player of the Tournament after notching three goals and two assists across six matches – all of which came in the knockout stage – Palmer has proved that class is permanent with some stunning showings.

Chelsea's Cole Palmer

His first-half brace against Luis Enrique’s side was dispatched in typically cool fashion, with all that was could running through the Three Lions superstar.

Palmer, 23, is unquestionably Chelsea’s main man, also assisting Chelsea’s conclusive strike.

We’ve seen many times Palmer’s ability to channel some level of performance possible only through the boots of a select few geniuses across the globe, but there’s another who has the potential to become something special for the Stamford Bridge side, and he showed as much against PSG.

In fact, he’s demonstrating the properties which suggest he could be Maresca’s own version of one Didier Drogba.

Maresca has found Chelsea's new Drogba

Chelsea signed a certain Joao Pedro from Brighton & Hove Albion in a £60m deal a few weeks ago, and it’s been quite the whirlwind start to this new chapter of his career.

Chelsea forward Joao Pedro

Aged 23, Pedro is one of the most talented developing forwards in Europe, and Chelsea must feel they have hit the jackpot already, with his confident efforts in the United States certainly emitting a Drogba-esque sense.

He collected and converted Palmer’s pass with a deft dink to put the scoreline beyond PSG’s reach, a goal that Drogba in his pomp would have been proud of. It was audacious, just as the Ivorian was throughout much of his time in west London.

As a result of his efforts in the final, The London Standard awarded him with an 8/10 match rating, praising his tenacity and intelligent running to outfox the opposing backline.

Minutes played

36′

60′

67′

Goals

0

2

1

Assists

0

0

0

Touches

23

25

35

Shots (on target)

2 (1)

3 (2)

1 (1)

Accurate passes

11/13 (85%)

7/12 (58%)

12/18 (67%)

Key passes

2

0

1

Dribbles

2/2

0/1

1/5

Tackles + interceptions

0

1

2

Duels won

3/6

3/9

3/12

Clinical, energetic and willing to get stuck in, Pedro has already showcased his blend of artful quality, his sharp technicality, and indeed a focus on the defensive side of the game that is reminiscent of Drogba in his Chelsea prime.

Luiz Felipe Scolari once called the Ivorian striker “one of the best in the world” during his time at Chelsea, owing to his big-game ability, work rate and robust passing game.

Chelsea's DidierDrogbacelebrates with the trophy after winning the Barclays Premier League

Pedro’s got a long way to go before he establishes a reputation of similar proportions as a Blue, but he’s off to a flyer, embodying many of those aforementioned virtues across the past week or so.

Chelsea have earned themselves a well-deserved rest ahead of the 2025/26 campaign. Maresca, indeed, has bagged two pieces of silverware and a spot in next year’s Champions League proper.

We’ve had a taste of Pedro’s quality in the final third, and though big-money strikers haven’t always made it work in Blue, this combative and complete Brazilian might just prove to be a reincarnation of Drogba.

£80m Gittens upgrade: Chelsea have looked at signing "one of the PL's best"

Chelsea are hoping to make several more signings in the summer transfer market.

ByAngus Sinclair Jul 13, 2025

Luke Littler could lead Wrexham to the Premier League! Teenage darts sensation backed to inspire Ryan Reynolds & Rob McElhenney's side with 'partnership' role touted

Luke Littler is being backed to help Wrexham into the Premier League, with a Ryan Reynolds and Rob McElhenney "partnership" mooted.

  • Red Dragons enjoyed meteoric rise
  • Hollywood owners made that possible
  • Darts star is a big football supporter
Follow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱
  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    Teen sensation Littler has taken the darts scene by storm, becoming a world champion in his chosen profession. Stunning success has allowed the 18-year-old to boost his bank balance and become a millionaire in double-quick time.

  • Advertisement

  • Getty

    DID YOU KNOW?

    Littler is a big football fan, with the Warrington native among those hoping to witness a reversal in fortune for Manchester United. There is little chance of him joining the board at Old Trafford, with Sir Jim Ratcliffe and the Glazer family calling shots there.

  • THE GOSSIP

    An opportunity may, however, present itself in North Wales. Hollywood stars Reynolds and McElhenney have pieced together an ambitious project at Wrexham, with the door being left open for more investors to join them on an epic adventure.

  • Getty/GOAL

    WHAT DOWIE SAID

    Ex-Premier League striker and manager Iain Dowie told , who offer the latest Premier League odds, when discussing a potentially productive venture for Wrexham: "Can you believe that Luke Littler at his age is so good at what he does, he would be a brilliant ambassador for Wrexham, what he has done is amazing.

    "Luke Littler giving advice to Wrexham would probably propel them to the Premier League! We talk about young footballers coming through and Littler is younger than all of them.

    "His mindset is beyond belief, he is the best player in the world alongside Luke Humphries and his mindset is beyond belief, he has a mathematical brain too. He has a sharp mind and to see him in a partnership with Wrexham would be great."

Felipão desabafa sobre placares baixos do Atlético-MG: 'Tá faltando gol'

MatériaMais Notícias

da blaze casino: O Atlético-MG tem vivido uma boa fase dentro de casa. O time mineiro se mantém invicto na Arena MRV, porém os placares baixos tem ligado o alerta de Felipão.

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da betano casino: Na última partida do Galo, Paulinho marcou aos 41 minutos do primeiro tempo e o jogo terminou em 1 a 0 sobre o Cuiabá. O time mineiro finalizou sete vezes, e levou perigo em três, porém não conseguiu ampliar o placar. O foco de Felipão agora é melhorar as finalizações e garantiu que vai trabalhar atrás de mudanças.

+ Arena MRV nega procura do Cruzeiro para jogar no estádio do Atlético-MG

– Quando vamos ter um dia de folga com 2 ou 3 a zero? A gente sempre sofre até o fim. Mas sofre e vence. Se sofrer e vencer, está ótimo. Hoje, se somarmos as chances vivas de gol, tivemos pelos menos três ou quatro. Já estimula a gente para trabalhar mais forte na criatividade. As coisas vão sendo acrescentadas e vamos ganhando confiança – declarou o técnico.

+ Próximos jogos do Atlético-MG: onde assistir e calendário com datas e horários das partidas

Desde a chegada do treinador, o Galo marcou mais de um gol em apenas três jogos. Scolari já comandou 14 partidas pelo Atlético-MG no Brasileirão, entre elas foram cinco vitórias, quatro empates e cinco derrotas.

تطورات ملف تجديد أحمد عبد القادر وأليو ديانج مع الأهلي

كشف الإعلامي أحمد شوبير عن آخر مستجدات ملف تجديد عقود بعض لاعبي النادي الأهلي، وعلى رأسهم أحمد عبد القادر وأليو ديانج، موضحًا الموقف الحالي من المفاوضات وقرارات الجهاز الفني الجديد بشأن قائمة الأجانب.

وقال شوبير في تصريحات عبر برنامجه الإذاعي صباح اليوم الثلاثاء: “هل أحمد عبد القادر جدد عقده مع الأهلي؟ لا، لم يُجدّد بعد، والنادي لم يفتح معه ملف التجديد حتى الآن”.

وتابع: “هل الأهلي يرغب في التجديد له؟ نعم، الأهلي يريد تجديد عقده، وهل عبد القادر منفتح على الأمر؟ نعم، اللاعب أيضًا منفتح ومستعد للتجديد مع الأهلي”.

طالع أيضًا | المدير الرياضي السابق لـ أوجسبورج يوضح مميزات ييس توروب مدرب الأهلي الجديد

وأضاف: “أما عن موقف أليو ديانج، فما زال غير محسوم، حيث تم ترك القرار للمدير الفني ليُحدد موقفه، وهو من سيقرر من بين اللاعبين الأجانب من سيستمر ومن سيغادر الفريق”.

ويستعد النادي الأهلي لمواجهة فريق إيجل نوار البوروندي، يوم السبت 18 أكتوبر، في إطار مباراة الذهاب لدور الـ 32 من بطولة دوري أبطال إفريقيا.

Liverpool make contact for £195k-p/w Chelsea star who Thierry Henry loves

Liverpool have “made contact” with a rival Premier League attacker over a move to Anfield in the summer transfer window.

Liverpool in need of Nunez and Jota upgrade

The Reds are expected to have one of their busiest summers in years, with upgrades needed in various positions, despite their Premier League title win.

In attack, a new centre forward is badly needed, with neither Darwin Nunez nor Diogo Jota representing the solution in that area now. The former simply hasn’t kicked on enough in three seasons, while the latter is an injury-prone player who cannot seem to stay fit for a whole season.

Liverpool's DarwinNunezcelebrates after winning the Premier League

Eintracht Frankfurt ace Hugo Ekitike has been linked with a move to Liverpool various times, and could stand out as the most exciting No.9 option this summer, especially considering Newcastle United look highly unlikely to allow Alexander Isak to leave.

Brighton attacker Joao Pedro has also been mentioned as an option for the Merseyside, as has Bayer Leverkusen superstar Florian Wirtz, who could potentially be used in a false nine role, even though it isn’t his most common position. Now, a big claim regarding the Reds signing another attacking player has emerged.

Liverpool make contact with Premier League attacker

According to Foot Mercato‘s Santi Aouna on X, Liverpool have made contact with Chelsea attacker Christopher Nkunku over a summer move to Anfield.

There would have to be question marks about Liverpool signing the £195,000-a-week Nkunku, considering he hasn’t exactly been a roaring success in a Chelsea shirt since arriving from RB Leipzig in 2023, only making nine starts in the Premier League this season.

Signing the 27-year-old would feel like a gamble by the Reds – one they don’t need to take – even though Thierry Henry has admitted he loves watching him play, and he has been lauded by former Chelsea and England centre-back Gary Cahill, who hailed him as a “very strong” player.

If Richard Hughes and Arne Slot truly feel that Nkunku is the best option to bring in this summer, they need to be trusted, but given his injury record and form at Chelsea, it would be a surprise if that was the case.

A better signing than Wirtz: Liverpool ramp up move for "the next Mbappe"

Liverpool’s primary goal this summer remains signing a new centre-forward.

ByAngus Sinclair May 16, 2025

Liverpool would be far wiser to look to sign Ekitike, who is five years his junior and seemingly on an upwards trajectory, following a great season for Frankfurt that has seen him score 15 goals in 30 Bundesliga starts.

'Be more like a monster' – Chris Richards has found his voice, and with a Gold Cup on the line and a World Cup a year away, the USMNT and Crystal Palace star is not afraid to use it

EXCLUSIVE: A verbal beatdown in South London forced Richards to realize he needed a mindset change to reach his potential, dreams

ST. LOUIS – "I just have a lot to say."

Chris Richards has found his voice. Not that it was ever lost, to be fair, but it was a bit more muted, maybe a bit more timid. Not anymore. Richards is himself, but louder. He's the same player, but more confident. He's Chris Richards, but a different version, one whose goal is no longer to break into teams, but to lead them.

That applies for both club and country. He lifted one trophy this year with Crystal Palace, where he was fueled by the hardest conversation of his career, right on through to an FA Cup. He has a chance to lift another on Sunday with the USMNT, having stepped into the spotlight in the absence of many of the team's stars. Despite several veterans missing this Gold Cup, there has been no leadership void – in large part because Richards has been eager to fill it.

That's by design. All of the interviews, press conferences and media availabilities? That's him taking responsibility. All of those moments on the training pitch? That's him using his experience. And all of the crucial moments that propelled the the USMNT to the Gold Cup final? Well, that's just Richards being Richards, establishing himself as one of the most vital pieces in this USMNT – with a World Cup on the horizon.

"Honestly, I'm just me," Richards tells GOAL. "It's not something where I have to step out of myself and do extra. I'm myself, but just a little bit more vocal. I've also gotten to a point where I can just be a leader and be more vocal rather than letting a captain do it. There can be three or four captains on the field. That's what makes a great team – more than one guy stepping up to the plate.

"I understand I'm a leader and I want to act like it. Regardless of who's on the team at the World Cup next year, I still want to be that person. I came into this summer with the confidence to say, 'Man, I'm doing my own f*cking thing and I’m going to be me'. Like, I'm going to earn my spot, but I'm also going to try and be captain or whatever the case may be. That's been my No. 1 goal this camp."

Richards finding his voice isn't a new development, though. His path towards leadership didn't begin this summer. It began with a verbal beatdown back in South London, one that forced him to reckon with the fact that he hadn't yet become the player he always wanted to be.

  • Getty Images Sport

    'What do you want to do?'

    It was in the late fall, Richards recalls, when he was sitting right where he had been for some time: on the fringes. It's where he spent the first two seasons of his Crystal Palace career. Richards was a center-back in the Premier League but, as of this fall, he hadn't really yet proven himself as Premier League quality.

    There's a difference, of course, and Palace assistant Paddy McCarthy knew it. He was a Championship player during his career, save for one solitary appearance in the Premier League. Richards is better than McCarthy ever was at every single facet of the game, but he wasn't the player McCarthy imagined he could be. The American needed a push – and a hefty one.

    "He asked me, 'What do you want to do?'" Richards recalls. "He was like, 'Do you want to captain your country? Do you want to play in the World Cup or do you just want to be a guy on a roster?' No, I want more. But he said that I need to prove it. He fully believed in me. 'Do you just want to be a guy that plays every few games, or do you want to be a captain?' I want to be captain, and he said, 'Well, show me'.

    "It hurt, but it was something I had to learn. I'm glad I had that conversation because I don't think I'd be where I'm at now if we didn't. I don't know where I'd be right now."

    Richards immediately took it to heart. It was an attitude change, yes, but also a hyperfocus on the little things. McCarthy drilled Richards repeatedly on them. For example, the Palace coaching staff saw Richards as a top-level progressive passer. All too often, though, he was getting jammed up, largely because he was playing too high.

    Drop off, McCarthy said, and find those extra five yards. Then, on the defensive end, Richards was told to "be more like a monster." The staff thought he was afraid of throwing his body around, despite his obvious size. Not anymore.

    "With Chris, I think he's finally coming into his own," USMNT teammate Tyler Adams said after Richards' recent goal against Saudi Arabia in the Gold Cup. "I'm just like 'Dude, go and win the ball, you're huge.' He's continuing to find that balance and be a threat for us."

    Richards, meanwhile, puts it more succinctly: "Sometimes you just have to blow someone up and say 'F*ck it'.

    With his mindset changed, he went on to lock down a starting spot at Palace, forming a fearsome back three alongside Frenchman Maxence Lacroix and England international Marc Guehi. Behind that trio, Palace went on to make history, winning an historic FA Cup to bring the club to new heights.

    Now, months later, Richards can admit it: he doesn't know if they would have won that trophy if he hadn't taken McCarthy's criticism to heart. At the very least, he wouldn't have played a part in it. It was a wake-up call and a reminder that there are levels to this – which one did Richards want to find himself on?

    "As men, we have to be able to take on harsh things and apply them," he says. "Especially when you see the best professional athletes, they've been told their sh*t don't stink their whole life and, at some point, someone has to have an honest conversation with them. From there, it's sink or swim. I've seen guys slip at the youth level because they weren't ready or willing for hard conversations."

    Richards didn't sink, though. Instead, he rose to the top.

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    Lifting the FA Cup

    Since winning the FA Cup, Richards has been asked about it almost daily. He doesn't mind. How could he not talk about it? When something means that much to so many people, it's a permanent part of life.

    By defeating mighty Manchester City, 1-0, at Wembley in May, Palace lifted the first major trophy in the club's history. This is a club that was founded in 1905. It took 119 years for Palace to reach these heights and, Richards was a big part of it, going all 90 minutes to preserve a clean sheet against one of Europe's most fearsome attacks.

    "People keep asking me what the best part of winning the cup was," he says. "I think it was what it meant to the generations of Palace fans. I love winning trophies – who doesn't? But I was looking into the crowd and seeing 80-year-old men crying their eyes out because even their parents hadn't seen Palace win a major trophy. That's what meant so much more."

    There was no distance between Richards and those fans in the stands. He lives among them. He's often stopped in South London, partly because of his trademark hairstyle, he admits. He's made friends and, while they may not have been on the field, it's always felt like they've been along for the ride.

    "I have a good friend who works at the store that I love," Richards says. "I've been going there ever since I got to Palace. He said he'd love to take his grandad, who has been a Palace fan since he was a season ticket holder in the '60s, with his dad. He asked me for tickets to the semifinal game because his granddad hadn't been in 40 years. I surprised him with two tickets to the final and said, 'Please bring your grandad because we're going to win this today.'

    "Maybe you're at City or Liverpool and this stuff goes under the radar. Not at Palace. When you do something for the first time, and in the way we did it? It was perfect."

    That momentum has carried right on into USMNT duty. Richards arrived in the U.S. with a smile on his face. It hasn't faded since.

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    No compromising with the USMNT

    Mauricio Pochettino noticed a difference after Richards arrived in Chicago for camp last month. There was something new about him, a new confidence. This was the same Richards, but one who had a bit more to say.

    "He's the type of player that can be a leader and step up with a performance," Pochettino said. "I'm happy for him because he's a great guy. I think it was fantastic for him, winning the FA Cup. And now he's trying to translate all of that experience to this team with his performances. At the same time, though, he's so humble, and that is what I like most. He arrived and is always very open to learn or talk."

    Richards has done plenty of talking this summer, certainly more than usual. With familiar faces such as Christian Pulisic, Weston McKennie and Antonee Robinson, among others, out of the team, Richards has been front and center.

    He's sat at the podium next to Pochettino at pregame news conferences. He captained the U.S. in the opening friendly against Turkey. Every chance he's gotten, Richards has been front and center, smiling.

    "It's authentic," he says. "That's one thing I don't want to do: switch things up. I don't want to be someone who switches when the cameras or interviews come. What you see is what you get. I'm the same way with my parents, with my girl, with the team. I'm the exact same.

    "I am one of those veteran players in this camp, and I think a lot of guys are looking to me for guidance, leadership, whatever the case may be. I also try to be a breath of fresh air. I try to keep things light around here."

    Not always, though. It isn't always light-hearted. Take, for example, the Costa Rica game. After Malik Tillman missed a penalty, members of Costa Rica were quick to get in his face and taunt him. Richards wouldn't stand for it. He, along with several others, darted across the field to start to stand up for their teammate.

    Richard earned a yellow card for it. Worth it, everyone around the U.S. has said. It was the right thing to do.

    It's something that multiple members of the USMNT have said has been lacking. Richards agrees. Sometimes, you need a good old-fashioned scrap to remind people of certain things. Sometimes, you need your huge center-back to dart across the field looking to send a message.

    "You have to be able to fight," Richards says. "You have to be competitive and be intense in every game. I think, within the last year or so, we may have lost that because of, I guess, how easy CONCACAF games had kind of come to us. It's not to blame anybody, but I think March was the straw that broke the camel's back. I think that was a real chance for us to look in the mirror and ask each other 'What we we doing?'

    "I think maybe we lost our way in the last year and became too friendly and nice to teams. F*ck that. We want to be the guys who, if you want to beat us, you have to earn it. We have to show teams that we're not anyone to mess with, whatever it takes. We stand up for each other. That's something that we should never compromise."

    That unwillingness to compromise is something Richards is bringing to everything he does now. Hindsight tells him there were moments he did in the past and, knowing the consequences those led to, he has a very new perspective on his own journey.

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    Ignorance and what-ifs?

    It's been seven years since Richards was anointed as the USMNT's next great center-back. That title was handed to him when he first started to break through at Bayern Munich in the summer of 2018. His youth coach, Eric Quill, said that Richards was going to be the USMNT's starter at the 2022 World Cup. It didn't happen that way.

    In that 2018 summer, people saw him in that famous Bayern red shirt. They, and Richards himself, didn't know how far away he was from being ready to wear it.

    Before arriving in Munich, Richards had briefly spent time with the FC Dallas academy, having been cut from that very same academy at age 16. Before that, he was just a kid in Alabama, one who had no clue what he was signing up for when he made the move to Germany in 2018.

    "Within two years, I went from playing in Alabama to playing for Bayern Munich," he says. "I almost felt a bit… ignorant? I felt like I was on top of the world at Bayern, but there's so much more that goes into being a full-time pro than just that. It was a lot to take in. Sometimes, looking back, I wish I maybe worked a little bit harder because who knows where I could be? I wouldn't change anything about my journey because it was my journey to take."

    He wouldn't change anything, but he can acknowledge that there are some "what-ifs" in the picture. The biggest one? The 2022 World Cup. He missed out due to injury. Even if he had gone, there's no guarantee what that would have looked like. At the time, he had just eight caps. Could he have done, something, anything, to ensure he could have gotten a few in Qatar that winter?

    "I missed that World Cup due to injury and when I look at it now, I was just a young kid," he says. "You know how your dad tells you you should stretch now so it's a natural habit when you're older? Those were things I could have done, that extra one or two percent more. Maybe I would have made the roster. Maybe I wouldn't have been injured.

    "It sucks because I feel like I deserved the opportunity, but it makes me work even harder now, knowing that I did miss out. God's timing is perfect, and that's my motto. I was devastated, but I've been letting that fuel me to make sure I do everything right now."

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