Right, that’s all from matchday live for today. Thanks for your emails and comments. As the action gets going you can follow along with Barry over here:
In the other game underway in the Championship, it’s 0-0 between Millwall and Ipswich. About 25 minutes gone at The Den.
Half-time: Birmingham 0-1 Derby
The Blues are pushing but yet to find a breakthrough against the ten men of Derby.
Boxing Day clockwatch with Barry Glendenning is now live with buildup to Coventry v Swansea and Egypt v South Africa. Go say hi:
Diogo Jota’s two sons will join the mascots at Anfield when Liverpool face Wolves in the Premier League on Saturday, the club confirmed on Friday.
The Portuguese forward, who played for both Premier League clubs, died in a car crash alongside his younger brother in July in northwestern Spain. He was 28.
Jota joined Wolves on loan from Atlético Madrid in 2017 and made a permanent move to the club the following year. He then signed a five-year deal in 2020 with Liverpool, where he won the league title earlier this year.
Saturday’s match marks the first time Liverpool and Wolves have met since Jota’s death.
More on that story:
Red card! Birmingham 0-1 Derby (Ward 39)
Joe Ward picked up a silly booking earlier for delaying a restart and with Roberts streaking towards the edge of the Derby box, the chasing Rams defender trips the Birmingham man. It’s an easy yellow and Ward is off. Derby lead but are down to 10.
Goal! Birmingham 0-1 Derby (Agyemang 27)
The visitors take the lead at St Andrew’s from a clinical counter-attack. Derby turned the ball over in their own box and with one ball over the top to Rhian Brewster they get in. Christoph Klarer makes the wrong decision to go out and close the former Liverpool and Sheffield United man, who lobs it over the defender to Patrick Agyemang to nod past a helpless Beadle in the Blues goal.
Havertz near to Arsenal return following knee surgery in August
Mikel Arteta hopes Kai Havertz is ready to return from a long-term knee injury and has predicted the German will bring “a different dimension” to Arsenal’s attack.
Havertz has been sidelined since undergoing knee surgery in August and had been expected back at the start of December before a setback in his rehabilitation. The 26-year-old was Arsenal’s top scorer in the Premier League last season with nine goals despite missing several months with a hamstring issue. He was pictured training this week and Arteta revealed Havertz had been “quite close” to being considered for the Carabao Cup quarter-final win over Crystal Palace on Tuesday.
Birmingham 0-0 Derby
Still no goals at St Andrew’s, but unfortunately for Birmingham Gray has had to go off. Lewis Koumas, son of Jason, has come on in his place. Patrick Roberts is looking lively, he just had a decent effort blocked after cutting in from the right that looked to be heading in.
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Keep your Boxing Day memories coming in, some lovely stuff already:
It was maybe the most difficult decision of my life. I was incredibly happy at Arsenal, surrounded by incredible people in an incredible project. Not only with great players and a path that is only growing and growing, but with a person who has been incredibly important for me, which is Mikel.
Carlos Cuesta, who at 30 has been coaching for half his life, discusses Arteta, tactics and how to win players’ trust with Nick Ames.
Read the full interview here:
We’re underway in the 12.30pm KO and Demarai Gray has already hit the post. Lively start at St Andrew’s.
John Robertson was a ‘scruffy, unfit’ genius who did not get the kudos he deserved
Forest great was loved in Nottingham but under-appreciated in Scotland before going on to thrive as a coach, writes Ewan Murray
On the eve of a Celtic European tie 25 years ago, Stiliyan Petrov cut an increasingly agitated figure. The young Bulgarian, soon to shoot to prominence under Martin O’Neill, was finding it impossible to snatch the ball from a rotund, wizened coach during a possession drill. Petrov’s teammates were cackling with laughter. John Robertson’s brilliance was understated enough in Scotland. Word of his talent in the game was never likely to reach Petrov as he grew up in deepest Bulgaria.
Petrov is part of a recent generation who owe a debt of gratitude to Robertson the coach. More of them later. When news of Robertson’s death filtered through on Christmas Day, the prevailing sense was that his country had lost one of a kind. He was also an individual who, for reasons associated with his own modesty, really never received the kudos he deserved in the land of his birth.
John Robertson, left, Ian Bowyer and Kenny Burns celebrate Nottingham Forest’s 1979 European Cup final victory over Malmo in Munich. Robertson delivered the cross that led to Trevor Francis’s winning goal
Robertson was two-footed (albeit much more devastating with his left), capable of a bamboozling switch of pace over five yards and a wondrous crosser. He was Brian Clough’s favourite, for goodness sake; a footballer key to two crucial European Cup final goals. It is a pity that only now may Robertson be properly cherished in Scotland. Robertson was very different in style to Denis Law and Kenny Dalglish. It should not be sacrilege to suggest he was their footballing peer.
Read Ewan Murray tribute to the late John Robertson in full here:
Team news: Millwall v Ipswich
Millwall: Crocombe, Taylor, Crama, Cooper, Bryan, Doughty, Mitchell, Emakhu, Neghli, Langstaff, Ivanovic.
Subs: Benda, McNamara, Sturge, Ballo, Leonard, Matthews, Bangura-Williams, Harding, Howland.
Ipswich: Walton, Furlong, O’Shea, Kipre, Davis, Matusiwa, Cajuste, McAteer, Nunez, Philogene-Bidace, Azon.
Subs: Palmer, Greaves, Young, Johnson, Taylor, Burns, Walle, Jack Clarke, Akpom.
Team news: Birmingham v Derby
Birmingham XI: Beadle, Iwata, Klarer, Cashin, Robinson, Leonard, Paik Seung-Ho, Roberts, Stansfield, Gray, Ducksch.
Subs: Allsop, Dykes, Fujimoto, Furuhashi, Koumas, Neumann, Sampsted, Willumsson, Wynne.
Derby XI: Widell Zetterström, Langås, Batth, Clarke, Ward, Thompson, Clark, Elder, Brewster, Brereton, Agyemang.
Subs: Adams, Blackett-Taylor, Eames, Forsyth, Jackson, Nelson, O’Donnell, Salvesen, Weimann
Jeremy Boyce has been in touch via email:
Hi Tom
As you say, big up to proper footie for laying it on for the paying public today. There’s a captive market you’d have thought the big money boys would be happy to cash in on. Let’s hope the EFL and other grounds are full and taking advantage. I grew up on third division footie at Shrewsbury Town. My first ever big match experience was an Elland Road Boxing Day v Noocassel, 1970, due to visiting grandparents in Leeds, of whom I was (and still am) a massive fan. My dad took me, the ground was way over capacity and pumping, Leeds in their Bremner/Giles pomp, 3-0. Some scallywag nicked my brand new Leeds scarf (a Crimbo present) from round my neck on the way in. Didn’t spoil my day.
As it goes Shrewsbury will be visiting Cheltenham today in a foot-of-the-table League Two clash, fingers crossed for a full ground and three points, if the lads aren’t too full of festive cheer from yesterday.
Please do keep your emails coming in, the comments section is now also open for those who prefer to operate below the line…
I’m well aware that I’ve missed some decent fixtures off my mini-preview. Let me know why we should be watching the game you’re tuning in to or, if you’re lucky, attending, below the line or via email.
League Two
Bromley v Bristol Rovers
Another club looking to reach new heights in Bromley, currently a point off top in League Two. A slimmed down Steve Evans was recently appointed by the Gas, it all makes for an intriguing fixture,
Chesterfield v Notts County
Matthew Dennis has three in his last five for fourth-place Notts County, who travel to seventh place but leaky Chesterfield. There should be goals.
MK Dons v Swindon
Dean Lewington played his 917th and final game against Swindon at the end of the last season in a game that ended 0-0. The Dons legend will be hoping to see his old teammates claim all three points today, which would put them just a point behind visitors Swindon.
League One
Blackpool v Doncaster
The Tangerines come into a fixture that is crucial to their hopes of getting out of a crowded League One relegation picture with the league’s most in-form forward in Ashley Fletcher. The 30-year-old has four in his last five and should he help his bag his side three points against similarly struggling Doncaster it may be enough to see Blackpool leapfrog a few other sides at the bottom end of the table.
Stockport v Lincoln
A heavy win for the home side could see them jump ahead of second-place Lincoln in the table. That makes for a decent fixture most weekends of the season.
AFC Wimbledon v Stevenage
Stevenage’s highest ever league finish is sixth in League One, that was in 2012. It would be a great story if they were able to better that this season.
Here’s some of the games that caught my eye across the EFL:
Championship
Millwall v Ipswich
The Tractor Boys have been in decent form after a slow start and Millwall are hovering on the edge of the playoff spots (which is a sentence that could have been written at almost any point over the last few years. I’ve been to the Den as an away fan on Boxing Day, it wasn’t much fun for me that day but that atmosphere was lively.
Stoke v Preston
The Potters have tailed off after a decent start but are better at home, while Preston are unbeaten in five and looking upward.
Norwich v Charlton
Philippe Clement has somewhat steadied the ship at Carrow Road, only one defeat in their last five and a chance to make up some ground on the teams above them with out-of-form Charlton making the trip to Norfolk.
Wrexham v Sheffield United
Nothing says box office like Chris Wilder football but the Man of Steel (as he’s known by no one except me) has turned around the Blades since returning for a third stint in charge at Brammall Lane. Of course, box office is the business of Wrexham, who are doing OK but finding the Champiosnhip about as tough as most pundits predicted in preseason.
May I say, firstly, thank the higher powers for the EFL. What would we be doing today without a full programme of Championship, League One and League Two games? Not to mention the National League, even in the semi-pros they know that Boxing Day is for football. There are some cracking fixtures too, let’s have a look at a few of them…
Hello all, I hope you enjoyed top, top, top Christmasses. Anyone get anything nice? Or anything proper duff? Let me know via email, everyone likes a dodgy present story. I got a very tasteful t-shirt from Art of Football (other football adjacent merch companies are available) and I’ve successfully conditioned my family into not buying me autobiographies from sports stars for Christmas any more. I think receiving Darren Gough’s book was a real low point in my gift receiving career.
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I’m going to hand this blog now to Tom Bassam, who will guide you through the next few hours. Thanks for reading, and hope you enjoy the rest of your day, whatever you are doing.
Gary Naylor, a contributor to these pages, has been in touch. “Fifteen long years ago, I wrote this about John Robertson, every sixty-something Evertonian’s favourite ‘other’ player,” he emails.
In a race with Ryan Giggs from the halfway line to the goalline, Ryan would be careering into the net as John Robertson just entered the D, already blowing hard. But Robertson was the fastest player I ever saw over one yard, and that was all he needed to play the killer ball. It helped that Robertson didn’t really run at all, he just paused, waiting, then shuffled and passed. He didn’t tackle back (but he never gave the ball away either) and was always an outball for a defence under pressure and was, therefore, not a maverick but a team man in every sense. He was never prolific as a goalscorer, though he got 12 in Forest’s title-winning season, but he always seemed to score vital goals, including the one that won Forest’s second European Cup (after presenting Trevor Francis with a near unmissable chance to win Forest’s first).
Robertson’s biggest fan was his manager Brian Clough, who knew a bit about players. There are many quotes attributed to Clough concerning Robertson, but my favourite (possibly apocryphal, but true in a larger sense) concerns a half-time team talk. A young substitute is being briefed by Clough, “… and when you get the ball, young man, just give it to The Genius”.The substitute, confused and intimidated, hesitantly points across at the first £1M player, scorer of the goal that won the European Cup, the footballing thoroughbred Trevor Francis. “Not him - HIM!” shouts Clough pointing at a slump shouldered, slightly overweight Scotsman puffing on a fag. Genius indeed.
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Looking further ahead to Saturday’s Premier League fixtures, Brighton feel that they can cause an upset at leaders Arsenal, despite being winless in their last four games. Here’s what manager Fabian Hurzeler had to say in his pre-match press conference:
We know what the issue is, we have to overcome the consistency thing and play for 90 minutes well. We have shown we are capable of doing big things, and the most important is to do the small margins right against Arsenal. Stay alive for the 90 minutes, but we can’t go there with the mindset of only to defend. We have to play with courage and bring our style of play to the pitch. We know that we can beat every team in the league and, although it will be a big challenge, we go there to win.”
Re Arsenal, please enjoy these two pieces. One on Declan Rice, who is now arguably the Gunners’ most important player …
… and one on the players’ festive visit to Great Ormond Street hospital.
A reminder that this is what CFG’s chairman, Khaldoon al-Mubarak, said back in 2019 when they bought Mumbai City:
We believe this investment will deliver transformative benefits to Mumbai City FC, to City Football Group and to Indian football as a whole. City Football Group is committed to the future of football in India and to the potential for Mumbai City FC within that future. We are very much looking forward to playing an active role in Mumbai City FC’s fan and local communities, and working with our co-owners to further develop the club as quickly as possible.
If you are catching up on what is going on with the Indian Super League, this John Duerden piece from August is a useful read.
In other Indian football-based news, this also broke in the summer.
Khalid Jamil, a former India international, was appointed in August. The AIFF sacked Igor Stimac in June last year before appointing Manolo Márquez, who left the national set up to rejoin Indian Super League club Goa. India are 142nd in the world rankings and were eliminated from World Cup 2026 qualifying in the second round.
Breaking: City Football Group divests stake in Mumbai City
The City Football Group (CFG) has divested its stake in Mumbai City amid uncertainty over the future of the Indian Super League (ISL), the team announced on Friday.
CFG, which owns several top clubs including Manchester City, had acquired a 65% stake in Mumbai in 2019, with the club going on to win two league titles. However, the ISL is in a state of limbo with the national governing body, the All India Football Federation (AIFF), struggling to find a new commercial partner after its 10-year deal with the previous one expired.
“The founding owners will assume full control of the organisation moving forward,” Mumbai said in a statement on their official website. “CFG has made this decision following a comprehensive commercial review and in light of the ongoing uncertainty surrounding the future of the Indian Super League.”
The ISL was put on hold in July with stalled negotiations for a renewal of the AIFF’s contract with its commercial partners, Reliance-led Football Sports Development Limited, cited as the reason.
Talks to renew the 2010 agreement came to a halt after India’s Supreme Court asked the AIFF not to renew the deal with FSDL until it had issued an order over a separate case to implement a new constitution for the federation. Reuters
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There were some interesting quotes from Ruben Amorim before Manchester United’s game against Newcastle.
Mainoo is struggling to get a game this season yet he is now being called the future of the club by his manager. A reminder that the 20-year-old wasn’t included in United’s squad at all for the 2-1 defeat at Aston Villa. It will be interesting to see if Mainoo reemerges in Amorim’s squad after Bruno Fernandes’ injury.
Afcon had a day off yesterday but all 24 teams have now played. This is a handy roundup of all the goals so far from the first matchday of this year’s tournament.
Morocco and Senegal are seen as the favourites but Algeria are a fascinating team, led by 34-year-old Riyad Mahrez. The winger, who now plays for Al-Ahli in Saudi and earns more than any other player at this year’s tournament, scored two in his country’s opening game on Wednesday, with Luca Zidane, son of the former Real Madrid and France superstar Zinedine Zidane, also impressing for Algeria.
An email from Bogdan Kotarlic:
“I was 10 years years old in 1982 and I collected stickers for my World Cup album, played that summer. I had three stickers of John Robertson and I still can remember it, although I don’t know where those stickers finished in the end. I just know that John Robertson in that sticker was different from many other football players. The sticker he had an aura of a good man, of a good soul. With that relaxed expression and the smiling eyes, he instantly became one of my favourite players.”
While we are on Robertson, this Donald McRae interview with the great man from 2015 is well worth a read …
… and this quote (also buried in this 2015 piece from Daniel Taylor) from Jimmy Gordon, Forest’s trainer during the Clough years, is quite something.
I saw a lot of Tom Finney and Stan Matthews in my time and it was very difficult to choose between the two. But when you look at what Finney and Matthews had to offer, John had a bit of both – and something extra on top.
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First they come for Boxing Day, now the 3pm blackout. Do these people have no respect?
The relative lack of Premier League football does however give the Football League (and non league) a festive time to shine.
And this might not be top of most people’s priorities, but most of the Premier League players had a rare Christmas Day off!
This Boxing Day is unusual in that there is only one Premier League fixture. Normally, it’s (more or less) a full house, which is a Christmas tradition here in the UK – the history of which you can enjoy in this handy video.
The reasons for just one Premier League game this year are here. Make of that what you will.
Boxing Day lands on a Friday and that has left the Premier League with a scheduling conundrum because of an expanded Champions League and a commitment to preserving a platform for the FA Cup.
The league must deliver 33 weekends of fixtures as part of its commitment to broadcasters and is struggling to locate another weekend to play games should at least half of the matches, as is tradition, be moved to Boxing Day.
On a standard Premier League weekend fixtures are, by default, played at 3pm on Saturday unless they are moved to a specified broadcast slot. This season there is only one broadcast slot reserved for a Friday.
First up, we must mention the sad news about Forest and Scotland legend John Robertson, who died on Christmas morning.
Tributes have been pouring in from all corners of the football world, but none more sincere than from his family, former teammates and those than played under him as a highly-successful coach.
Feel free to get in touch with your own memories or thoughts of Robbo (or anything else you fancy): michael.butler@theguardian.com.
Preamble
Sick of your family and hiding out in the loo? Can’t quite face the actual news. Welcome to the warm embrace of your Boxing Day football liveblog, in which you can forget all your worldly troubles and concentrate on the important business of Manchester United v Newcastle (8pm GMT), a full Football League fixture list and four Afcon matches: Angola v Zimbabwe, Egypt v South Africa, Zambia v Comoros and Morocco v Mali.
Four Afcon matches (Jeremy), that’s insane.
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First top flight game live was Manchester United 0-0 Liverpool on Boxing Day 1980. My Dad and uncle took us (two lads 10 and 12) to see the game. My uncle was from Leigh (we were down from Cumbria) and I think they all wanted United to win. My brother certainly did, and we were in the Stretford End, with a raucous home following around us stretching along to that corner to our right as you looked out at the pitch from behind the goal.
They all shouted ‘Pinocchio! Pinocchio!’ at Ray Clemence. But I remember Albiston clearing off the line from Dalglish….the massive cheer (which bemused me) when Jimmy Nicholl raced over to clear the ball high into the stand and away from Dalglish as he raced through….and David Johnson hitting the post at the far end. I didn’t understand or appreciate 0-0s at the time, as I don’t think I fully got football, but now I happily take the point. United away? 0-0? ….a point will do fine, thanks.
It would take me 5 years of sporadic, random games (including going to Old Trafford again) before I would set foot in Anfield (3-1 v Newcastle) with Hansen, Neal, Lee and Dalglish featuring in both games despite the time gap.
Anyway, the Boxing Day game featured several other familiar names - Kennedys Ray and Alan, Clemence, McDermott, Johnson... Jordan, Coppell, McIlroy, Bailey...
But looking at the team sheet, two players have just caught my eye as I'm pretty sure neither were regulars at the time - not in my memory anyway - so, for Colin Irwin for Liverpool and Nikola Jovanovic for United - I wonder if anyone remembers anything of these two ? - ..because I was pretty young, as I say.