Newcastle United face Carabao Cup semis, but eyes on Wembley final

Howe is refusing to take credit for guiding the club to the semifinal of the competition for the first time since 1976, because he’s got cup glory on his mind.(AFP)
Short Url
Updated 24 January 2023
Follow

Newcastle United face Carabao Cup semis, but eyes on Wembley final

  • Coach Eddie Howe has cup glory on his mind
  • 2 games against lowly Southampton lie ahead

NEWCASTLE: Reaching a semifinal is not enough for Newcastle United, that’s the view of head coach Eddie Howe who only has eyes for Wembley.

Bottom-of-the-table Southampton stand between the Magpies and a place in the final of the Carabao Cup, with the first leg of the last-four tie set for the south coast on Tuesday evening.

And Howe is refusing to take credit for guiding the club to the semifinal of the competition for the first time since 1976, because he’s got cup glory on his mind.

“We’re delighted to be where we are but the semifinal itself isn’t enough. I don’t think it’s enough for anybody,” said the United boss.

“To say you got to a semifinal means nothing. You want to get one step further. I know the players feel the same way. Me and my coaching team feel passionately about it, that we want to make the final but we have to navigate these two games and they are going to be very difficult.”

While United made a Europa League semi in 2004 and their last FA Cup one in 2005, there’s been a generational gap in the various guises of the trophy formerly known as the League Cup.

Howe said: “It is a long time and we are desperate to try and change that. Looking too far back and going too historical at this moment probably doesn’t serve us well.

“We are proud to be where we are but we want more. And all season, the players have shown that mentality themselves. They have never settled for or been pleased with anything but winning so that is a really healthy place to be. So Saturday we were disappointed we did not achieve our objective. Now we move onto another game and we are desperate to win.”

Two players who’ve come into contention after recent positive cameos off the bench are Allan Saint-Maximin and Alexander Isak. After a grueling 0-0 draw in South London against Crystal Palace, Howe may consider changing things up at St Mary’s.

“I’d say they’re both getting there, for sure,” said the Newcastle head coach. “I think it’s different situations. With Alex, we’ve had to be mindful of the fact that he hasn’t had a lot of training time. With a lot of games, you can’t train the players to the intensity that Alex has probably needed.

“We’ve backed off his training, and exposed him to the games, but at some stage, he will need that training loan to get back to his very best levels. We’re nursing him in gently. Allan has had more training time. He’s had more fitness work, so I think Allan is in peak physical shape.

“I’ve got a strong squad to pick from and we’ll make decisions on individuals, their form and fitness and how they feel and try and pick a team we think can win.”


Saudi Cup place available in Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques qualifier at King Abdulaziz Racecourse

Updated 6 sec ago
Follow

Saudi Cup place available in Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques qualifier at King Abdulaziz Racecourse

  • Last year’s winning jockey Joel Rosario back to ride for Prince Faisal bin Khaled bin Abdulaziz 

RIYADH: Joel Rosario will aim for back-to-back wins in the Group 3 SR1,500,000 ($400,000) Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques Cup — a qualifier for the 2026 Saudi Cup — aboard Ameerat Alzamaan (GB) at King Abdulaziz Racecourse on Saturday.

The US-based Dominican rider is one of several high-profile jockeys booked to appear this weekend on a glittering card, with Christophe Soumillon, Mickael Barzalona and Danny Tudhope all jetting into Riyadh and taking on the likes of local champion Adel Alfouraidi.

Rosario scooped the 1,800m trial 12 months ago aboard Rattle N Roll (US) for trainer Kenny McPeek, but will this time don the Red Stable silks of Prince Faisal bin Khaled bin Abdulaziz to partner last year’s 1000 Guineas and Fillies’ Mile winner after she recently bolted up in the domestic G3 Prince Sultan Ben Abdulaziz Cup.

The winner of six of her seven starts is one of four Red Stable representatives, along with last year’s second and third — Wait To Excel (GB) and Wootton’sun (FR) — while El Jabartee (IRE) completes the quartet looking to qualify for the $20 million showpiece on Feb. 14.

Soumillon and Barzalona both compete for the White Stable of King Abdullah bin Abdulaziz aboard Lionel (US) and Michael Scofield (US), who recently fought out the finish to the domestic G2 Prince Naif bin Abdulaziz Cup, with Camilio Ospina on globally Listed King Saud Cup hero Haqeet (US).

Trainer Thamer Aldaihani and owner Sheikh Abdullah Homoud Almalek Alsabah have four runners with their jockey Ricardo Ferreira electing to partner last year’s 2000 Guineas winner and Saudi Derby third Mhally (GB).

Also in the 20-strong field is Scotland Yard (US), who was second on his recent comeback under Alfouraidi, having disappointed when strongly fancied for this race in 2025 before bouncing back to score in the Tuwaiq Cup on Saudi Cup weekend.

There are three other qualifiers for Saudi Cup weekend on Saturday, with Aldaihani and his jockey-owner combination responsible for unbeaten and top-rated Al-Haram (IRE) in the SR465,000 2000 Guineas — a Saudi Derby qualifier — and 19 will go to post in the 1000 Guineas, won last year by Ameerat Alzamaan.

The qualifier for the Obaiya Arabian Classic, the G3 SR165,000 Al-Dareyah Cup, has drawn a field of 12 headed by the Nasser Mutlaq-trained Turki Al-Khalediah II (KSA), while 18 will go on trial in the SR165,000 Riyadh Dirt Sprint Qualifier sponsored by Nova.

Earlier in the weekend, an additional four qualifiers are staged on Friday, when the turf course is swung into action. The highlight of this is the SR1,000,000 Listed Prince Khalid Abdullah Cup, in which one runner will secure a gate in the newly upgraded G1 Neom Turf Cup presented by Howden on Saudi Cup day.

Last year’s winner Bolide Porto (IRE) returns for the White Stable and Ospina, and he was most recently seen taking third behind the UK import Candyman Stan (IRE) for the Al-Ghuraban Stable and runner-up Monsieur Jumbo (FR) in a course-and-distance open last month.

The card opens with the SR165,000 1351 Turf Sprint Qualifier sponsored by Saudia, in which Barzalona holds excellent claims for the White Stable aboard French import Cacofonix (IRE) after he ran second on his Riyadh debut to the Red Stable representative Zefzaf (US), who will be partnered by Rosario, on Dec. 19.

Race two is the SR165,000 Red Sea Turf Qualifier sponsored by Baden Galopp and BBAG Sales and White Stable have a big chance here with the hat-trick-seeking Sayyah (US) under Naif Alanazi, with the four-year-old switching to the grass and attempting 3000m for the first time.

The final Friday qualifier is the SR165,000 Al-Mneefah Qualifier sponsored by SHG, in which the lightly raced Adeeb Al-Shahania (FR) is turned out quickly after an excellent fourth to the exciting Nadem Al-Molwk Al-Khalediah (KSA) in the G1 Prince Sultan bin Abdulaziz International Cup last weekend.

Old rivals Baseq And Bake (US) and Jade De Faust (FR) will again do battle on Friday, with the Purebred Arabian pair heading 11 runners in the G3 SR150,000 Sprint Championship over 1200m.

Returning to Saturday, and enormous prize money of SR5,000,000 is up for grabs in both the King Abdulaziz Cup over 1,600m for Purebred Arabian Horses and the domestic G1 King Abdulaziz Cup for three-year-olds, which sees Red Stable runner Thayaf (KSA) bid to maintain an unbeaten sequence after landing all three starts under Ferreira.

There is a further domestic G1, too, with 12 declared for the SR1,500,000 Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques Cup for local breeds, in which hat-trick seeking Badr Alsamawi (KSA) tops the ratings, having been fifth in last season’s Saudi Derby.