Sports
‘Now I understand why Jose got angry’ – Essien on life as a coach
During a distinguished 20-year playing career that included spells with Chelsea, Real Madrid and AC Milan, Michael Essien played under some of the best managers in the game.
But it wasn’t a desire to follow in the footsteps of Jose Mourinho, Carlo Ancelotti or Guus Hiddink that motivated one of the finest midfielders of his generation to try his hand at coaching.
“I just woke up one day and thought, ‘Let me start doing something,'” Essien tells BBC Sport.
“I started coaching so I could learn how it is to be a coach. Now I talk to a few of [my former managers]. Just normal talk – nothing tactical.
“I had some great, great managers that I was lucky to work under. I learned a few things from Jose and from Ancelotti – his calmness and how he manages his players, the way he tried to put his arms around his players.
“Now I understand a bit more why Jose would get angry.”
Since 2020 Essien has been working as an assistant coach for Danish top-flight side FC Nordsjaelland (FCN).
That might seem a curious choice of club for a player as well known as Essien to begin his coaching career. But Nordsjaelland’s background drew the former Ghana international to the team based in Farum, a small town in the east of Denmark.
In a reversal of the usual dynamic, Nordsjaelland are a professional club owned and operated by a youth academy.
Celebrating its 25th anniversary this year, the Right to Dream academy was founded in Ghana in 1999 by Tom Vernon, a former Manchester United scout.
With a holistic approach to developing its youngsters on and off the pitch, the academy has produced several top players while also providing a route to further education for its students.
West Ham’s Mohammed Kudus, Southampton’s Kamaldeen Sulemana and Brentford’s Mikkel Damsgaard are among Right to Dream’s most notable graduates.
In 2019 Right to Dream purchased Nordsjaelland to provide a pathway to European football for its best hopefuls. And next year its new American venture, San Diego FC, will join MLS as an expansion club.
“I’ve known the founder, Tom Vernon, for a very long time, since I was 17 or 18,” Essien explains. “I always kept in contact with him and he followed my football career. When I stopped playing, he just messaged me and said, ‘What are you doing?’
“I said, ‘I think I’m done playing.’ And he said, ‘OK, maybe you should come and look around the place.’ He told me about the whole project. I came and it was a nice environment. So I said, ‘Yeah, I’d love work here.’
“I love how they develop their boys here, giving very young boys the opportunity to experience professional football.
“That was one of the reasons I chose to be here. It’s calmer; the environment is very nice and very healthy. Everyone is ready to help whenever you need.”
Sports
Ineos deny departure as team target more sponsorship
Britain’s Ineos Grenadiers cycling team insist they will remain in the sport, but are searching for new partners to keep pace with competitors.
Ineos, who won seven Tours de France between 2012 and 2019, mostly as Team Sky, suffered their worst season in 2024.
And they begin this year without top talent Tom Pidcock, who left for Q36.5 in December.
“The team will exist into the next cycle [from 2026],” said chief executive John Allert. “We are very lucky to have owners that are very passionate about this sport; they are very involved in this sport.”
Ineos Grenadiers are owned by Ineos boss Sir Jim Ratcliffe, while former Sky team principal Sir Dave Brailsford heads up the broader Ineos Sport stable that includes a near 30% stake in Manchester United.
“They get on their bike and they’ve had numerous opportunities if they didn’t want to be in the sport to make that clear. But they do want to be in the sport,” added Allert.
Ineos won just 14 races last year, on their way to finishing only seventh in the sport’s biggest race, the Tour de France, through 23-year-old Spaniard Carlos Rodriguez.
Typically, the team have won around 35-40 races during the road cycling’s World Tour calendar, which includes a mix of one-day races, stages and overall classifications.
Ineos’ budget of an estimated 36m euros (£30.3m) has long been considered to be one of the biggest in the pro peloton, but other teams have brought more resources into the sport in recent years. These include Tour winner Tadej Pogacar’s UAE-Team Emirates, who are a so-called super team, consisting of multiple top sponsors and paying their best riders record-breaking salaries.
And Allert concedes Ineos now need to bridge that gap.
“I’m not going to put a number on that, but it’s a number that’s greater than what we are currently spending,” said the Australian.
“We certainly have a commercial strategy that is an evolution of our strategy – we’ve appointed an agency looking at partnership opportunities like most other teams.
“I’ve heard some bonkers rumours in the last couple of weeks about people buying us or investing in us or whatever else – [the] agency [is] out there talking to hopefully as many leading global brands a possible.”
Meanwhile, Allert added Pidcock and the team had become “no longer compatible” when asked about the 25-year-old’s departure.
The Briton won one of the Tour’s most iconic stages in 2022 – on stage 12’s race to Alpe d’Huez – and also won the Strade Bianche, Amstel Gold and Brabantse Pijl one-day classic races in an Ineos jersey.
But he was unexpectedly left out of the final big race of last season, and departed the team shortly afterwards.
“I think the whole Tom topic might be one for a book in 10 years’ time,” added Allert.
“But we’re certainly moving on; we parted ways amicably. I have a lot of respect for Tom – he’s got a lot of talent.
“I personally left on very good terms from when we last spoke and we wish him well.”
Sports
Australian Ewan signs one-year deal with Ineos
Australian sprinter Caleb Ewan has signed a one-year contract with British team Ineos Grenadiers for the 2025 season.
The 30-year-old has won stages at the Tour de France, Giro d’Italia and Vuelta a Espana, and has twice finished on the podium at the prestigious Milan-San Remo one-day Monument.
He joined Australia’s Team Jayco–AlUla in 2023 and won four races last year.
Ewan, who has 63 professional wins overall, says his move to Ineos can help him rediscover his best form.
“In 2025, my goal is to return to winning big races,” he added.
“It’s been a few years since I’ve won some of those major events but I firmly believe I have it in me.”
John Allert, chief executive officer of Ineos, said Ewan is a “proven winner” and “one of the great sprinters of this generation”.
Sports
GB’s Patten & Finn Heliovaara triumph in Melbourne
Britain’s Henry Patten and Finland’s Harri Heliovaara won the Australian Open men’s doubles title to continue their remarkable start as a pairing at close to 02:00 local time in Melbourne.
Patten, 28, and Heliovaara, 35, teamed up just nine months ago but the Wimbledon champions celebrated their second Grand Slam triumph in the space of six months on Saturday.
After missing 10 set points in an epic 34-point first-set tie-break against Italians Simone Bolelli and Andrea Vavassori, Patten and Heliovaara fought back to win 6-7 (16-18) 7-6 (7-5) 6-3 after more than three hours on court.
Addressing Heliovaara in his post-match interview on a near-empty Rod Laver Arena, Patten said: “Wow, what a journey we have been on.
“It’s truly special to share the court with you. I wouldn’t like to do it with anyone else. Let’s keep going.”
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