‘I am passionate about this club’: Dan Burn’s Newcastle United homecoming has been 19 years in the making

Dan Burn, a $17.5 million transfer deadline day signing from Brighton and Hove Albion, was released by his boyhood club at the age of 10 when he was a youngster at the Newcastle academy. (File: Reuters)
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Updated 02 February 2022
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‘I am passionate about this club’: Dan Burn’s Newcastle United homecoming has been 19 years in the making

  • Towering defender arrives from Brighton with a mission to plug the club’s leaky defense

NEWCASTLE: From stacking shelves in a supermarket and non-league football to gracing the turf at St. James’ Park in the famous black and white, Dan Burn’s road back to Newcastle United has been a long one.

Now the 29-year-old is determined to show he is the man to fix the Magpies’ defensive woes.

Northumberland-born Burn, a $17.5 million transfer deadline day signing from Brighton and Hove Albion, was released by his boyhood club at the age of 10 when he was a youngster at the Newcastle academy.

A much-traveled career then took him from Blyth Spartans and New Hartley to Darlington, then Fulham and, finally, the Premier League with the Seagulls.

Newcastle manager Eddie Howe is hoping the towering center-half can add steel and athleticism to what is the second-worst Premier League defense this season.

“It was tough. I think when you’re a kid you’re maybe a little naive and you think that when you get around the setup, you are going to play for Newcastle forever,” said Burn, discussing his release from Newcastle United almost two decades ago.

“It definitely knocked me. But, to be fair to Newcastle, I don’t think I was very good at the time. I’ll give them that,” he said.

“What it did do is make me want to prove people wrong. I have fed off things like that my whole career.”

It feels like a lifetime ago that Newcastle United were rubbing shoulders with Europe’s elite. Well, it is for many.

The Magpies have qualified for Europe’s premier football competition, the Champions League, on three occasions, most recently in 2003.

Burn, a former NUFC season ticket holder, remembers those famous nights on Tyneside as if they were yesterday.

“I started playing football because I was watching Newcastle,” he said.

“I was a Junior Magpie (an NUFC kids club) from the age of 6, that’s when I got my first boots and then I remember the Champions League nights — Andy Griffin scoring against Juventus. The guy next to us put a bet on for Griffin to score that night — probably the only person ever to do that.”

Burn said: “The last game I went to was probably when we beat Sunderland 5-1, with Shola (Ameobi) scoring a few.”

He added: “It is hard when you start your own career, but I have always kept an eye on what Newcastle are doing — and it was always my biggest game of the season, coming here. It’s the team you support, it is very special.”

However, it was not an easy decision to leave Brighton, Burn’s home for the past three years, where he was a regular under Graham Potter and progressing with every season under the highly regarded coach.

But, as with many Geordies, that pull to return, no matter the circumstances, is often too strong to ignore.

Burn said: “Honestly, if it hadn’t been Newcastle, I would never have left. I loved my time there.”

He added: “We were doing well, I was playing regularly and I enjoyed playing under the manager and with that bunch of lads. But once I knew Newcastle were interested, I knew I wanted to be here. I have spoken to the manager (Howe), who talked of the project (long-term) but in the short-term we need to fight to keep this team in the division.”

Burn said that “it is hard for people who are not Newcastle fans or are Geordies to understand how much this means to the city. Hopefully, if I bring some of that passion off the pitch, on to it, I can make a positive impact.

“As a professional, you do that anyway. But being a fan — all my family and friends are fans, too — it makes you want to do even better for them. You know how much it means to them. I am passionate about this club and I want to do my best to help it.”

The NUFC project, under new majority owners the Public Investment Fund of Saudi Arabia, was another reason that persuaded Burn.

The owners spent an NUFC-record $121 million in the January transfer window — the largest sum outlaid by any side in Europe, which includes the fee for Burn, the highest the club has ever paid for a central defender.

“It is very exciting,” he said. “I think there is going to be a plan to develop all areas of the club, not just the playing squad.”

Burn added: “We’ve said for years all it would take is that input and the fans would feed off it. I knew if someone came in to change the club for the city and the fans they would get a good reaction. I think we have made some good signings, good, established Premier League players, who have played a lot of games — and I think that matters a lot.”

The defender said that he is excited at the prospect of pulling on the Newcastle strip.

“It is something I’ve not done since I was a kid. I never thought it would happen, it’s been a long road — and I’m just delighted to be here.”


World’s best pool players arrive in Jeddah for $1m World Nineball Tour event

Updated 02 June 2024
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World’s best pool players arrive in Jeddah for $1m World Nineball Tour event

  • $250,000 first prize, total pool biggest in event’s history
  • Top Saudis in draw alongside world No. 1 Francisco Sanchez Ruiz

JEDDAH: The world’s best billiards players arrived in Jeddah on Sunday to compete for $1 million in prizes at the Saudi Arabia World Pool Championship 2024.

This is the first time the Kingdom has hosted a World Nineball Tour event and the $250,000 first prize and total pool are the biggest in its history.

A total of 128 players will compete in the event, which runs from Monday to Saturday at the Green Halls.

“The World Nineball Tour is a global professional pool tour committed to staging world-class international sporting events,” Emily Frazer, managing director of Matchroom Multi Sport, said on Sunday.

“We are delighted to announce our partnership with the Saudi Ministry of Sport and the Saudi Arabian Billiard & Snooker Federation. We are incredibly grateful … for this unique opportunity. We believe this landmark 10-year deal will provide the catalyst to developing the stars for tomorrow from this country.”

She added that the inaugural Saudi Junior Championship would run alongside the elite event, from Monday to Friday, at the Prince Abdullah Al-Faisal City Sports Hall in Jeddah.

Nasser Saab Al-Shammari, president of the SABSF, said: “This is a historical moment for Saudi Arabia as we are hosting this elite tournament for the next 10 years and we welcome world class talents to play live in front of our fans here.

“This is really extremely special for us to host the top stars but also we are very happy to see the best 13 local Saudi players take part in this international tournament, which will give them the experience of a lifetime.”

World Nineball Tour No. 1 and reigning champion Francisco Sanchez Ruiz said: “The world championship in Saudi Arabia marks a historic moment for pool and I am really looking forward to defending my title among the world’s best in Jeddah.”

The Spaniard said that while he had been in the Kingdom he had also been able to watch the King’s Cup football final and see his favorite player, Cristiano Ronaldo.

Also in this week’s field are five-time US Open champion and 2022 world champion Shane Van Boening, 2018 world champion Joshua Filler and Europe’s No. 1 Jayson Shaw.

The field comprises the top 100 from the World Nineball Tour rankings and 28 wildcards, including Germany’s Pia Filler — the only woman in the event — and several Saudi players. Among the locals are Saad Aldress, Ahmed Al-Jabar, Khalid Alotaibi, Ahmed Fairaq, Khalid Al-Ghamdi, Hussain Mustafa, Ahmed Al-Ahmadi, Fahad Alharbi, Nawaf Shamardal and Othman Alzahrani.

The Kingdom’s No. 1, Al-Jabar, said he was delighted to be able to compete against the best pool players in the world.

“First of all, I am honored to represent my country in this elite tournament along with my other Saudi players and glad to have the opportunity to compete directly and experience a world-leading tournament right in Saudi Arabia,” he said.

Fans of nine-ball pool can watch the tournament via Matchrooom’s broadcast partners, Sky Sports in the UK and Ireland, and Saudi Sports Center.


Kylian Mbappe signs with Real Madrid for upcoming season

Updated 02 June 2024
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Kylian Mbappe signs with Real Madrid for upcoming season

MADRID: Kylian Mbappe has signed every document completing his transfer to the LaLiga club Real Madrid next season, according to noted Italian sports journalist Fabrizio Romano on X.
The French striker made his decision in February to leave Paris Saint-Germain after seven years of playing for them. His contract was set to expire this summer making him a free agent.


Mbappe’s stint with Paris Saint-Germain has won him six Ligue 1 titles, three French Cups, two League Cups and a record five Player of the Year awards.
Real Madrid celebrated a record-extending 15th Champions League title on Saturday after defeating Borussia Dortmund 2-0 at Wembley Stadium. 
Madrid’s latest triumph came without a recognized striker after club icon Karim Benzema departed last year. The gap was filled by English midfielder Jude Bellingham, but by next season Ancelotti will have more fire power to call upon. 
Mbappe is the name most wanted by Madrid fans after a decade-long pursuit of the man many believe to be the heir to Lionel Messi and Cristiano Ronaldo as the world’s greatest player.


No marathon this time as Swiatek sprints into French Open quarterfinals

Updated 02 June 2024
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No marathon this time as Swiatek sprints into French Open quarterfinals

  • Defending champion dismisses Anastasia Potapova in just 40 minutes with a crushing 6-0, 6-0 win
  • Swiatek remains on course for her third consecutive French Open title and fourth overall

PARIS: After the French Open marathon came the sprint.
Defending champion Iga Swiatek swept into the quarterfinals at Roland Garros in just 40 minutes after a crushing 6-0, 6-0 win against Anastasia Potapova.
Swiatek won without even facing a game point against her. The match ended when Potapova hit a forehand into the net on the first match point.
“I was just really focused and in the zone,” Swiatek said. “It went pretty quickly, pretty weird.”
Their match started at around 11 a.m.
That’s just eight hours after men’s defending champion Novak Djokovic finished his five-set, 4 1/2-hour marathon against Lorenzo Musetti at just after 3 a.m. in the latest finish in tournament history.
Swiatek remains on course for her third consecutive French Open title and fourth overall. The top-ranked Pole will play Wimbleon champion Marketa Vondrousova after the fifth-seeded Czech beat unseeded Serb Olga Danilovic 6-4, 6-2.
They played on Court Suzanne Lenglen, the only other court with a roof. After five consecutive days with rain delays, play on the other roofless courts got underway on time.
Later Sunday, third-seeded American Coco Gauff took on unseeded Italian Elisabetta Cocciaretto.
Australian Open champion Jannik Sinner and two-time Grand Slam winner Carlos Alcaraz were in men’s fourth-round action.
Second-seeded Sinner faced Frenchman Corentin Moutet and third-seeded Alcaraz played No. 21-seeded Canadian Felix Auger-Aliassime.


Pakistan will look to be positive in T20 World Cup— skipper Babar Azam 

Updated 02 June 2024
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Pakistan will look to be positive in T20 World Cup— skipper Babar Azam 

  • Pakistan, T20 world champions in 2009, reached semifinal and final stages in 2021, 2022
  • Their preparation for this year’s World Cup includes losses against Ireland and England 

Pakistan captain Babar Azam called on his side to stay in high spirits as they begin their Twenty20 World Cup campaign off the back of a poor run of form.

Pakistan, T20 World Cup champions in 2009, have performed well in the past two editions of the competition, reaching the semifinals in 2021 and losing to England in the final in 2022.

However, their preparations for this year’s tournament in the United States and West Indies has been far from ideal, with a sobering defeat by Ireland in an eventual 2-1 series victory followed by a 2-0 defeat by England in a rain-affected series.

“Effort is in our hands, but results, we do not know,” Babar said in an episode of the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) podcast released on Sunday.

“How we present ourselves on the ground, our body language and how we communicate with each other will matter. We must be positive, so results will come... Conditions in the USA may pose challenges as we are going there as a national side for the first time.

“We are in the process of collating various cricket and match-related information from players who have played there, which can help and assist us in our preparations.”

Pakistan are in Group A of the World Cup and begin their campaign against hosts US on June 6. They will then take on arch-rivals India in one of the event’s highly-anticipated matches three days later.

Pakistan and India have faced each other seven times at the T20 World Cup, with Pakistan winning just once.

“An India-Pakistan match is always the most talked about; it is discussed too much wherever you go in the world,” Babar said.

“The players get different vibes and excitement. What will happen is that everyone supports their country, so the focus is on that match. The whole world is focused on the day when the India-Pakistan match is held.

“Naturally, there will be nerves, but we need to keep our focus, stick to the basics and play easy cricket. It is always a pressure game; the more you keep cool and calm, believe in your skills and hard work, then things get easier.” 


Turkish club Fenerbahce announces Jose Mourinho as its new coach

Updated 02 June 2024
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Turkish club Fenerbahce announces Jose Mourinho as its new coach

  • Former Real Madrid boss Jose Mourinho will be unveiled as the new coach of Fenerbahce soccer club, the club said

ISTANBUL: Former Real Madrid boss Jose Mourinho will be unveiled as the new coach of Fenerbahce soccer club later Sunday, the club said.
Following days of strong indications that Mourinho was to take charge of the Istanbul club, it said in a post on social media platform X early Sunday that the Portuguese manager was to attend a ceremony at its Sukru Saracoglu ground.
“Saracoglu is waiting for its new coach Jose Mourinho and its great fans at 19.00!”
On Saturday night Fenerbahce had posted a video message from Mourinho, 61, in which he told Fenerbahce fans he would “see you tomorrow in Kadikoy and let’s start our journey together.”
It’s Mourinho’s first job since he left Roma in January after two and a half years marked by winning the Europa Conference League in 2022 and a series of disputes with referees.
The Portuguese has not worked outside of the top five European leagues since 2004, when he left Porto after winning the Champions League and joined Chelsea, which was on the rise under then-owner Roman Abramovich.
Since then he has also coached Inter Milan, Real Madrid, Manchester United and Tottenham in a career filled with trophies and off-field controversy.
Fenerbahce finished second to fierce rival Galatasaray in the Turkish league this season and clashed with the Turkish soccer authorities, including by taking its team off the field in the Turkish Super Cup game in protest.