Marc Guehi: The rise of England’s ‘absolute gem’ Euro 2024 defender | Football News

Marc Guehi: The rise of England’s ‘absolute gem’ Euro 2024 defender | Football News


When coaches, team-mates and those who know Marc Guehi well are asked about the strengths of the centre-back, it is his composure which is routinely referenced.

So perhaps it shouldn’t be a surprise the 23-year-old has performed so well at Euro 2024. One of the Premier League’s most promising young defenders has taken to the tournament stage seamlessly and has been arguably England’s best performer in Germany so far. Certainly one of their most consistent. Amid all the drama he has been a steady, assured presence at the heart of the defence.

Before the Euros, there were serious concerns about the quality of England’s backline and added worry about Harry Maguire – who, for all his critics, is the leader of that defence – being ruled out with injury. But Guehi and his more experienced centre-back partner John Stones, have helped Gareth Southgate’s side post the best defensive figures of any team in the competition so far. It is at the other end of the pitch where Southgate has bigger problems.

It is perhaps typical of Guehi’s character that when he was asked about those defensive stats and his performances he was quick to dismiss the suggestion he has been England’s best player and pay credit to Maguire for his help in helping him settle at international level since his debut in 2022.

But that modesty only masks a determination and drive to Guehi’s personality which has taken him to the top of the game and led different coaches in club and international football to name him captain of their sides.

Marc Guehi pays homage to the England boss Gareth Southgate as he looks ahead to the game against Slovakia

A skipper of the England age groups and a stand-in captain at Crystal Place at 21, Guehi is a player who leads his team-mates by example.

“Straight away I was impressed by how mature he is,” said England U21s boss Lee Carsley when he named him captain. “The way he talks about the game, the way he influences players off the pitch. The example he sets off the pitch as well as on it made it an easy choice.” England seniors boss Gareth Southgate has praised him for never looking rushed.

They are traits that have been there since the start. “When Marc was here he was calm, he was kind, he was intelligent, he worked hard and he was a real team player,” Guehi’s former primary school head teacher Edward Dove told Sky Sports News.

Sky Sports News’ James Cole visits Marc Guehi’s primary school to see where it all began for the England centre-back

That was the young boy Michael Beale got to know well. The former Rangers boss was a leading coach in Chelsea’s academy and took Guehi – a kid from the same south east London estate and primary school as Beale – under his wing.

Beale got to know Guehi’s father, John, a minister, and would even drive Guehi around the M25 to Cobham, where the young defender enthusiastically listened, learnt and developed among an elite group of rising stars.

“He was a really shy boy but came to life on the pitch,” Beale tells Sky Sports. “He was a hugely well-mannered young man. I can’t think of too many stories of mischief!

“His discipline has been driven by the family but even when he was very young compared to the other boys he was always very focused, working hard in every session. He never missed a session that I can remember.”

That attitude was coupled with a hunger to defend.

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Marc Guehi has shown a hunger to defend from a young age

“He was always a defender,” remembers Beale. “He was like a rash on the forwards, aggressive in the tackle. He liked to keep his game very simple and then pass it to the midfielders or into the forwards quite quickly and he hasn’t changed from that.

“You see how aggressive he is ‘locking down’ and stealing possession. But he’s very calm when he’s defending.”

At Chelsea, and then on loan at Swansea and Crystal Palace, Guehi played with Conor Gallagher. “It seems like we can’t leave each other alone,” the midfielder has joked. “We’re best mates.”

They are now England colleagues at this Euros and the depth of quality in that Chelsea academy is partly responsible for helping to shape them into internationals and leading Premier League players. Declan Rice, who also started for the Three Lions against Slovenia, was another player in that academy.

“Chelsea at the time and still is a fantastic academy,” says Beale. “We did a lot of work going around London to get the best players across all of the boroughs.

“Look at the players in the age groups in and around Marc’s: Mason Mount, Declan Rice, Fikayo Tomori, Ola Aina, Tammy Abraham, Dominic Solanke, Reece James, Rhian Brewster, Callum Hudson-Odoi…

“When you had that mix of players, the academy fixtures here in the UK but also going further afield and playing in Europe, the experience that they got playing together and how strong a bond those boys got is fantastic.

“They pushed each other on. The training games were always the best games of the week.

A look at centre-back Marc Guehi’s best bits from the 2023-24 campaign

Like many of those players listed above, Guehi had to leave Chelsea to find regular first-team football but he is now being linked with a summer transfer which would take him to the top end of the Premier League. Manchester United and Liverpool are rumoured to be interested in a transfer.

The centre-back isn’t the biggest defender in the league at 6ft and he is a right-footer playing on the left side of a backline, but Beale is confident Guehi would cope with that transition to one of the country’s biggest clubs, pointing to his technical skills in the position

“His reading of the game and his athleticism gets him a yard on his centre-forward,” says Beale.

England's Marc Guehi, challenges for the ball with Serbia's Dusan Vlahovic during a Group C match between Serbia and England at the Euro 2024 soccer tournament in Gelsenkirchen, Germany, Sunday, June 16, 2024. (AP Photo/Andreea Alexandru)
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Marc Guehi has been one of England’s top performers at the Euros

“He shows a huge amount of confidence to play on the left side and his technical upbringing from Chelsea means he can use his left foot, albeit he is dominant on his right foot.

“When you see the teams line up, he’s not the biggest centre-back but he has a huge leap.

“Quietly people are realising we have an absolute gem in him.”

He might be too humble to sing his own praises, but Guehi has plenty of people talking about him now.

Jack Draper: The rise of bright tennis prospect to new British No 1 | Tennis News

Jack Draper: The rise of bright tennis prospect to new British No 1 | Tennis News


Jack Draper is Britain’s new No 1 after rising above Cameron Norrie in the rankings, but who is the 22-year-old bright tennis prospect from Sutton and can he become a Grand Slam winner?

Having missed the entire grass-court swing last year because of injury, Draper’s preparations for this year’s Wimbledon saw him pick up his first ATP Tour title by beating Italy’s Matteo Berrettini in the Stuttgart Open final on Sunday.

The youngster, who has been on an upwards trajectory in recent years, has now edged ahead of Norrie for the British No 1 ranking.

Jack Draper in short

Nickname: JD and Drapes

Place of birth: Sutton

Lives: London

Trains: NTC/Wimbledon

Favourite tournament: Wimbledon

Family: Father Roger was a talented amateur tennis player and Chief Executive of the LTA from 2006 to 2013

Mother Nicky is a former British junior champion and introduced Jack to tennis

Brother Ben played college tennis at University of California-Berkeley and now pursues a Master’s degree at Wake Forest

Supports Manchester United

Favourite athlete is MMA star Conor McGregor

Where it all began

Draper started playing at his local Sutton Tennis & Squash club, competing with his brother under the tutelage of mother and tennis coach, Nicky.

As a coach at the club, his mother brought Jack along to his first training session at the age of six.

Draper peaked at No 7 in the ITF junior world rankings, aided by his runner-up finish at the 2018 Wimbledon boys’ singles event.

Speaking at the Madrid Open Draper feels he is ‘not at the level’ he wants to be at yet

Draper’s rise

The left-hander is one of the brightest prospects in British tennis – as reflected in his 223-place rise up the ATP rankings in 2022, which saw him end the year ranked inside the top 50.

Draper burst onto the scene with impressive victories over Jannik Sinner and Alexander Bublik at Queen’s Club in 2021 and became the youngest Brit to win three ATP Challenger titles in two months, the first Brit to qualify for the Next Gen Finals and backed those achievements up with strong performances at Eastbourne, the Canada Masters and US Open.

He introduced himself to the mainstream when he took a set off Novak Djokovic in the opening match of Wimbledon in 2022 as a 19-year-old.

22 years and 178 days

Jack Draper becomes the youngest British No 1 since Andy Murray was his same age on 9 November, 2009

Draper reached two ATP Tour finals prior to his success in Stuttgart on Sunday. He lost a close encounter to Adrian Mannarino in Sofia in November 2023 and then made the final again in Adelaide at the start of 2024, losing out to Jiri Lehecka in three sets.

Before that, Draper’s previous best was reaching his first ATP Tour semi-final at Eastbourne in 2022 as a wildcard.

Draper explains how he’s had to get used to the demands of the tour

Who is Draper coached by?

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Draper is coached by James Trotman

LTA National Coach James Trotman at the National Tennis Centre, although he recently trialled a potential second coach when hiring Wayne Ferreira in an effort to jump-start his career.

Trotman is a former player himself, winning the 1995 Wimbledon Championships boys doubles with Martin Lee and the 1997 Australian Open boys doubles with David Sherwood.

Draper at the 2023 US Open

Highlights of Draper’s second round match against Hubert Hurkacz at the US Open

After missing Wimbledon due to injuries, Draper returned to the tour with a strong showing at the US Open.

The Brit defeated Radu Albot, Hubert Hurkacz and American Michael Mmoh to reach the fourth round at Flushing Meadows – his best performance at a Grand Slam event so far.

Draper’s motivation

“I just love winning. To be honest, I love to put in the work and then gain the rewards from it. I know it’s not always like that, but at the same time I enjoy how tough it is. I love competing and I enjoy training and getting better.”

Draper feels his serve is his biggest weapon

Injuries and illness

Jack Draper of Britain reacts after defeating Marcos Giron of the U.S. in their first round match at the Australian Open tennis championships at Melbourne Park, Melbourne, Australia, Tuesday, Jan. 16, 2024. (AP Photo/Alessandra Tarantino)
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Draper won a gruelling five-set match against American Marcos Giron at the Australian Open, then immediately raced to a courtside bin to throw up

Draper’s progress has stalled amid numerous physical issues but after working on his fitness and losing 3kgs, he now seeks psychological assistance to help with anxiety which hinders his physical performance.

“I always felt like the physical issues, like a lot of that has been for me mental as well, sort of dealing with stress, dealing with my emotions,” said Draper.

“Obviously as I’m getting physically better, I can maybe cope with it a little bit better, but it’s definitely an area that is really important as well.

“I’ve never really felt like a lot of tension in my tennis. That’s not the issue. It’s like… when you do have that anxiety when you are playing, obviously there’s a lot going on. It’s hot. There’s sort of no way out from the court. You have to really suffer to win the points, and you’ve got to work hard.

“Every player feels it, and every player has different kind of ways they struggle with it, whether it’s someone getting really tight on their forehand, and they can’t hit a forehand. It might be their movement starts to go a little bit.

“For me, it feels like my breathing starts to really struggle, and I can’t get the oxygen in me. That’s obviously a difficult point when you are playing. You are not only playing the guy, you are almost competing against yourself because you’re not obviously feeling 100 per cent.”

Annabel Croft revealed that Draper is a natural right hander but plays with his left, like Rafael Nadal, which means the backhand is played like a second forehand

Ready to lean on his idol

Draper explains the impact that Andy Murray has had on his career, describing him as an inspiration

Draper has said he is ready to “lean on” Andy Murray a lot after the Scot calls time on his career.

Murray is in the final throes of an outstanding career, having confirmed earlier this year that he is unlikely to play beyond the summer.

“It is going to be much easier to tap into him when he has finished,” Draper said.

“As a tennis player you don’t have time to think of anything but yourself. You are always thinking about what you can do better.

“When he has stopped I will be contacting him a lot more, asking him for opinions on certain things, asking him what he has tried and if it has worked for him.

“I am definitely going to lean on Andy a lot and I am sure he will want to help me because he has always been very supportive of me.”

The future?

Draper has shown he has the talent to challenge at the top of the game and admits he feels a responsibility to take the baton.

“I want to achieve so much in the sport – it is not all about winning, it is about inspiring kids to play and making people pick up a racket and knowing that tennis isn’t all just about playing on Centre Court Wimbledon,” he said.

“It can be amazing for so many people in different ways.”

What’s coming up on Sky Sports Tennis?

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  • Berlin Open (WTA 500) – June 17-23
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Richard Riakporhe’s rise from near death to Selhurst Park dream world title fight against Chris Billam-Smith | Boxing News

Richard Riakporhe’s rise from near death to Selhurst Park dream world title fight against Chris Billam-Smith | Boxing News



Selhurst Park is only a few miles from the Aylesbury Estate in south London, where Richard Riakporhe grew up.

But Riakporhe has come a terribly long way to reach this point when, on Saturday, he fights for a world title at the Crystal Palace ground.

To challenge for the WBO championship this weekend, live on Sky Sports, at the stadium of the football club he supports, in a rematch against British rival Chris Billam-Smith for him is the stuff of dreams.

It marks the culmination of a journey that he almost didn’t get to start. When he was just 15, Riakporhe was the victim of a stabbing that he was lucky to survive. He still bears the scar from that brush with death. It’s a reminder now of how he changed his whole life.

Chris Billam-Smith got a cold response from Richard Riakporhe when he predicted he will retain his WBO world title by knockout on Saturday night.

“I came off the streets straight into the boxing gym,” he told Sky Sports. “I came through the hard way.

“I learned like a true apprentice.”

The Lynn, the oldest boxing club in the country and an institution in south east London, set him on that new path.

“I fell in love with the sport. It gave me purpose, it gave me drive, it gave me something to do, kept me out of a lot of trouble and before you know it, before long I was actually competing for amateur championships,” Riakporhe said.

“I said you know what, I want to pursue my passion and my passion was boxing. I just felt like it was perfect for me and who I am as a human being. I’m very ambitious. I always wanted to work towards something in my life and it just matched everything.”

Don’t miss our latest episode of ‘The Gloves Are Off’ featuring cruiserweight rivals Chris Billam-Smith and Richard Riakporhe.

He didn’t even realise he had a unique quality that would subsequently mark him out as a professional – his fearsome punch power.

In his first amateur bout, he hesitated. He backpedalled.

“I didn’t want to get hit. I always believed as an amateur that everybody possessed the same power that I did. I thought it was normal to be able to punch like that. I didn’t want to get hit with that type of power so I was just always moving and then when I landed my shots the fight was over. I knocked him out in the first round,” Riakporhe recalled.

“It was a run of KOs. I remember going in the championships and knocking out everybody to get to the finals. I was known for being a big puncher from way back then.”

Billam-Smith, on his own quest to avenge his only career defeat against Riakporhe, believes he can turn the Londoner’s power-punching into a weakness. He thinks Riakporhe relies too much on that power, waiting for a knockout and giving up rounds. That Billam-Smith fully intends to exploit.

Ahead of Chris Billam-Smith’s WBO cruiserweight world title fight with Richard Riakporhe at Selhurst Park, take a look back at some of the biggest stadium fights in British boxing history.

Riakporhe naturally rejected that notion. “That’s complete nonsense,” he said.

“It doesn’t matter whether I’m being lazy or not, whether I’m winning the rounds or not. There are fights that I’ve been in where I didn’t come with the intention to win the rounds. I just wanted the knockout.

“I’ve hit so many people that I know that when I land my shots I will cause a lot of damage, even if they don’t get knocked out.”

He did acknowledge: “It’s a blessing to have a skill like that but it can be a curse at the same time. It can make you a bit lazy.

“I’ve gone back to the gym and I’ve rectified that laziness and that’s what makes me even more dangerous now.”

This fight will be Riakporhe’s first attempt to win a world title, but he has beaten Billam-Smith before.

The Toe2Toe panel discuss the WBO cruiserweight world title fight between Chris Billam-Smith and Richard Riakporhe and whether Riakporhe’s natural power will be a problem again for Billam-Smith’s shaky defence.

“He has to rectify the loss. He has to get one back,” the Londoner said. “He can’t live with his own failure and that’s the blemish on his record to me.

“Because guess what, it’s actually brought him back full circle to me.

“So what does that mean? Have you really progressed? Because if you’d really progressed you wouldn’t be having to see the ‘Midnight Train’ once again. But we’re back here.”

He added: “I’m not giving ‘The Gentleman’ no more chance. There’s not going to be no trilogy. This fight is where it ends. I’ll do it again and that’s it. There’ll be no third chance for him.”

For Riakporhe winning this fight would “would mean everything”.

Ellie Scotney and George Groves share what they believe could make the difference in Chris Billam-Smith’s fight against Richard Riakporhe.

“Because we had a goal and the goal was to become world champion and to move on from there. I never thought that I would be able to perform on the ground of my favourite football team. Just to be able to represent Crystal Palace was enough for me. That done it for me. For them to entrust me with their brand, what they represent, as a fellow south Londoner that is very humbling, very humbling for me,” he said.

“I will do everything to make sure I bring that title, not only to win it for myself but also to bring to hope to everybody in south London. Everybody has their individual fights, things that they’re going through that nobody knows, just to be a kind of reference to them.

“Like if I can do it coming from my background, all the things that I had to overcome, being stabbed when I was 15, nearly dying, being a product of my environment, being able to make it out, everything was always a fight and I just want to be that kind of reference to them. That I’m one of you. I’m no superstar.

“I’m just a normal guy. A normal working class guy that just had dreams and was ambitious and I made something of myself.

“You can also do the same too.”

Only 30 per cent of tickets remain for Billam-Smith vs Riakporhe. Get your tickets now via Boxxer.com.

Watch Chris Billam-Smith defend his WBO cruiserweight world title against Richard Riakporhe at Crystal Palace’s Selhurst Park, live on Sky Sports on Saturday June 15; or Stream with NOW