Newcastle face UEFA quiz after weather dents prep for Champions League clash with AC Milan

Newcastle United midfielder Sandro Tonali admits Tuesday's Champions League clash at AC Milan will be 90% emotion as he returns to the San Siro. (Reuters)
Short Url
Updated 19 September 2023
Follow

Newcastle face UEFA quiz after weather dents prep for Champions League clash with AC Milan

  • Their flight to Italy on Monday, ahead of Tuesday night’s game, was delayed by two-and-a-half hours, which meant they were late for media interviews
  • However, coach Eddie Howe played down concerns about the effects of the late arrival on the players ahead of the cub’s return to the competition after two decades

MILAN: Newcastle United boss Eddie Howe on Monday played down concerns about the effects of inclement weather in the Lombardy region of Italy on his side’s Champions League preparations.

The Magpies will face AC Milan on Tuesday night but their flight into Milan Malpensa Airport was delayed by about two and a half hours. As a result, the club’s media obligations at the San Siro on Monday had to be pushed back. The delay meant they fell foul of UEFA regulations and could potentially face sanctions for failing to turn up for interviews in a timely fashion on the day before a game.

The team’s flight was held on the tarmac at Newcastle International Airport for about two hours before the weather in Milan eased, with the area around the San Siro in particular hit badly by heavy rain and thunderstorms.

Howe admitted the delay was hardly ideal ahead of the club’s first game in the Champions League for two decades but added that he does not believe it will make any difference when the action gets underway on Tuesday night.

“It was a weather problem,” he told journalists when the press conference finally began. “We were delayed taking off and we were sat on the runway for quite some time. But that is nothing out of the ordinary for us. We do a lot of traveling in the UK and this happens from time to time. Apologies for being late.”

He added: “It has been a long day for us — early start and late finish. So we have just been trying to get our preparation and game plan right, trying to make sure we are as organized as we can be. It has been intense, as after the Brentford game (in the Premier League on Saturday, which Newcastle won 1-0) it was all focus on this one.

“There is no (concern), we are used to it. Slightly later than we would have liked to arrive, for the players, but it’s not a big deal.”

Though much improved in the past 18 months or so, Newcastle are not yet considered among the favorites in Europe’s top club competition. In fact, few expect them to progress from what many are calling this season’s “group of death,” which also includes Paris Saint-Germain and Borussia Dortmund. But that has not affected Howe’s ambitions for the competition.

“We want to do as well as we can,” he said. “There is no secret, no surprise in my answer. We want to be very competitive, first and foremost.

“We want to give a really good account of ourselves and impose our style of play on the competition, and with that then we hope we get the results that follow.

“The competitive nature of our game has to be there, which it was against Brentford. We went back to basics again and we need to do that again tomorrow night.”

The match marks the return for the first time of Newcastle’s major summer signing, Sandro Tonali, to the club United obtained him from in July. He has become a bit of a cult hero on Tyneside already but was much loved in Milan as well.

Howe said he is delighted with what he has seen so far from the player, who is expected to return to the side on Tuesday after an injury, and believes there is much more to come from the 23-year-old.

The head coach, who will be making his own Champions League debut, said: “It is very early days for us with Sandro but he is a hugely impressive character. He is really committed to Newcastle, to living in Newcastle, the language — everything we would have wanted him to do.

“It is very difficult to transfer from team to team and country to country. Again, he has committed to everything we asked him to do.

“He picked up an injury while away on international duty but we don’t think it is too serious and we hope he is fit and available for us tomorrow.”


Arab Cup 2025 attendance surpasses recent AFCON and AFC Asian Cup

Updated 5 sec ago
Follow

Arab Cup 2025 attendance surpasses recent AFCON and AFC Asian Cup

  • The tournament, held under FIFA jurisdiction for the second time, achieved a record average attendance of 38,644 fans per match
  • Total attendance more than doubled since 2021, with Algeria vs. UAE quarter-final pushing it past one million spectators

RIYADH: For a tournament often dismissed by critics as little more than a friendly or “B-team” competition, the 2025 Arab Cup delivered a compelling response.

A total of 1,236,600 people attended the 32 matches across the tournament, an average of 38,644 spectators per game, as the Arab Cup returned to Qatar for a second consecutive time after its successful staging in 2021. That earlier tournament, initially launched as a Confederations Cup-like test event ahead of the World Cup, drew 571,605 spectators in total.

Despite those figures, the Arab Cup has faced persistent criticism. Questions have been raised around the quality of play and refereeing standards, with some supporters – both within and beyond the Arab world – branding the tournament “meaningless.”

Yet when placed alongside recent continental competitions, the attendance figures tell a different story.

The 2023 African Cup of Nations in Ivory Coast attracted 1,109,593 fans across 52 matches, an average of 21,338 per game. Meanwhile, the 2023 AFC Asian Cup, also hosted in Qatar, recorded 1,507,790 spectators over 51 matches — roughly 29,565 per game, the highest average in the competition’s history.

Direct comparisons, however, require context. Continental — as opposed to regional — competitions draw support from across vast geographies, while the Arab Cup benefits from strong expatriate communities based in the host nation. Expecting the same travel patterns from fans in East Asia or West Asia would be, to say the least, unrealistic.

Even so, the attendance of more than 38,000 fans per game is significant. The Arab Cup was not always popular, with the attendance in 2021 struggling to rise above an average of 17,000 per game. Only four games at the 2025 edition fell below the 20,000 mark.

Historical context further underlines this shift. The 2011 AFC Asian Cup in Qatar, along with multiple editions of the West Asian Football Federation Championship held across the region, struggled to surpass a figure of 13,000 fans per game.

While Morocco will bask in the glory of the 2025 Arab Cup, the tournament itself has shown a broader shift in football engagement across the Arab World — one no longer driven solely by interest in European leagues, but by growing confidence in domestic teams, national projects and regional competitions.

From Saudi Arabia’s ambitions in club football to Morocco’s recent international success and Qatar’s continued role as a host, momentum continues to build across the Middle East and North Africa, with the Arab Cup one of the latest competitions offering tangible evidence of that change.