fabian schaer – Artifex.News https://artifex.news Stay Connected. Stay Informed. Fri, 29 Mar 2024 04:11:32 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6 https://artifex.news/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/cropped-Artifex-Round-32x32.png fabian schaer – Artifex.News https://artifex.news 32 32 What Has Gone Wrong For Saudi Arabia-backed Newcastle United? https://artifex.news/what-has-gone-wrong-for-saudi-arabia-backed-newcastle-united-5331823/ Fri, 29 Mar 2024 04:11:32 +0000 https://artifex.news/what-has-gone-wrong-for-saudi-arabia-backed-newcastle-united-5331823/ Read More “What Has Gone Wrong For Saudi Arabia-backed Newcastle United?” »

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Newcastle enjoyed a meteoric rise during the first 18 months of their new era under the control of the Saudi sovereign wealth fund but the Magpies’ progress has stalled this season. Eddie Howe’s men are languishing in 10th place in the Premier League with 10 games to go and any hope of the club’s first major trophy since 1969 is over for another year. AFP Sport looks at what has gone wrong on Tyneside.

Rules limit spending

In a season in which the Premier League’s profit and sustainability rules (PSR) have begun to bite, few clubs have been as affected as Newcastle.

In stark contrast to the early days of Abu Dhabi’s huge investment at English champions Manchester City, Newcastle have been limited on how heavily they can lean on their new-found wealth from the Gulf.

Despite qualifying for the Champions League for the first time in 20 years, Newcastle still had to tread a fine line to avoid exceeding PSR after spending more than £250 million ($315 million) in the first three transfer windows under the new ownership.

Chief executive Darren Eales has admitted they may even need to sell one of their prized assets in the summer if they are to invest again in the squad, with Bruno Guimaraes and Alexander Isak among those linked with moves away.

“If we’re going to get to where we want to get to, at times it is necessary to trade your players,” Eales said after the club posted a £73 million loss for the 2022/2023 season.

Injuries and suspensions

To compound their problems with PSR, Newcastle have reaped little reward from their outlay of more than £100 million in the 2023 summer transfer window.

Most of the transfer budget was splashed on Italian international Sandro Tonali, but he only played 12 games for the club before being hit with an eight-month ban for betting offences during his time with AC Milan.

Another major signing, Harvey Barnes, has been one of a host of key players who have spent months on the sidelines due to injury.

England internationals Nick Pope and Callum Wilson have missed chunks of the campaign, while Joelinton and Sven Botman will be absent for the rest of the season.

Newcastle’s season came off the rails during a gruelling December and January period as injuries mounted.

Howe’s men lost eight times in 10 games as they exited the Champions League at the group stage, lost a League Cup quarter-final to Chelsea on penalties and sank down the Premier League table.

Tough draws

Fortune has definitely not favoured Newcastle in the cup competitions.

They finished bottom of a competitive Champions League group featuring quarter-finalists Paris Saint-Germain and Borussia Dortmund, as well as seven-time European champions AC Milan.

In the League Cup they eventually succumbed at Stamford Bridge after beating both Manchester City and Manchester United in the early rounds.

A quest for FA Cup glory was ended by a 2-0 defeat at City.

Ashworth uncertainty

Of more long-term concern Newcastle is the loss of sporting director Dan Ashworth.

The 53-year-old is on gardening leave awaiting the green light to join Manchester United after being head-hunted by Jim Ratcliffe’s new regime at Old Trafford.

Howe has expressed concern at what Ashworth’s exit will mean for his side’s plans in the transfer market.

Has Howe hit a ceiling?

The future of the manager is also in doubt, with rumours circulating that Jose Mourinho is keen on a return to the Premier League at St James’ Park.

Mourinho has been seen meeting Newcastle chairman Yasir Al-Rumayyan, the governor of Saudi’s Public Investment Fund, during a recent trip to the kingdom to take in high-profile sporting events.

Howe has been hugely popular among Newcastle fans for leading the club away from a relegation battle and into the Premier League’s top four.

But he lacks the trophy-laden CV that the Saudis may seek for the next phase of their project in England’s north-east.

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Newcastle United Serve PSG Dose Of Champions League Reality In Battle Of State-Backed Clubs https://artifex.news/newcastle-united-serve-psg-dose-of-champions-league-reality-in-battle-of-state-backed-clubs-4451239/ Thu, 05 Oct 2023 03:18:20 +0000 https://artifex.news/newcastle-united-serve-psg-dose-of-champions-league-reality-in-battle-of-state-backed-clubs-4451239/ Read More “Newcastle United Serve PSG Dose Of Champions League Reality In Battle Of State-Backed Clubs” »

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Newcastle had been waiting 20 years for a night like this and it was worth the wait for 50,000 Geordies as the Magpies blew away Paris Saint-Germain 4-1 to announce their arrival as a Champions League threat. The first ever meeting between the clubs pitted the sporting interests of Saudi Arabia up against Qatar. Saudi emerged victorious and in some style as Newcastle’s rapid rise less than two years since the Gulf Kingdom’s sovereign wealth fund took control of the club shows no signs of stopping.

Not since PSG’s collapse to lose a 4-0 first leg lead in a 6-1 defeat at Barcelona in 2017 have the French champions suffered such a humbling on the Champions League stage.

That embarrassment triggered the club’s Qatari owners to break the world’s transfer record twice in a matter of months to land Neymar and Kylian Mbappe.

Yet, the star-studded project is still yet to conquer Europe and there were lessons for PSG to learn on and off the pitch at St. James’ Park.

Despite spending nearly 400 million pounds ($483 million) on new players, Newcastle are not even among the top spenders in the Premier League since the Saudi-backed takeover.

Three of their goalscorers on Wednesday — Miguel Almiron, Sean Longstaff and Fabian Schar — were already at the club when they were fighting relegation from the English top-flight just two years ago.

The other, Dan Burn, has fought his way to the top from starting his career in the sixth tier of English football at Blyth Spartans and cost £13 million from Brighton in 2021.

Both Burn and Longstaff are lifelong fans of their hometown club and grew up watching Newcastle from the stands of St. James’ Park.

“For me and Burny to score is unreal,” said Longstaff.

“There’s a few here who probably thought three years ago we were out the door. I’m so proud to be from Newcastle, I’m over the moon.”

PSG outthought and outfought

PSG have long been criticised for failing to make the most of the hotbed of talent on their doorstep in the French capital.

Most famously, they lost their only Champions League final to Bayern Munich from a goal scored by Parisian-born Kingsley Coman, who left PSG as a teenager.

Luis Enrique warned before the game that Newcastle were the side from the lowest pot of seeds for the group stage that everyone wanted to avoid.

Yet it did not stop the former Barcelona boss from naming three big money summer signings Ousmane Dembele, Goncalo Ramos and Randal Kolo Muani alongside Mbappe in a front four.

Not for the first time in the Champions League, PSG’s individuals were outthought and outfought by a greater collective unit.

Roared on by an incredible atmosphere, Newcastle made sure their Champions League homecoming was a night that will not be forgotten, even if the locals party into the small hours.

“They will be (proud) and I think they will probably be a bit drunk as well,” added Longstaff on his family’s reaction.

“They probably weren’t planning to drink on a Wednesday night but that might have changed!”

Newcastle’s new era appeared to have been given a Champions League baptism of fire with last season’s semi-finalists AC Milan and Borussia Dortmund also in the toughest section of the draw.

But Eddie Howe’s men are top the group after two games.

The hope on Tyneside is that this is just the start of a journey towards one day winning the Champions League.

Not for the first time, PSG showed a fellow state-backed club how not to go about that goal.

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