Irish Daily Mirror

STONES... SO GOOD IT’S A DISGRACE

Grealish pays his own tribute to the Barnsley Beckenbaue­r

- BY ANDY DUNN Chief Sports Writer @andydunnmi­rror

NOT for the first time, Jack Grealish summed it up rather neatly.

“You’re a disgrace,” he told John Stones, but not in Jose Mourinho-anthony Taylor style.

It was player recognisin­g player, Stones being a disgrace because he was so unflappabl­y majestic on the grandest of stages.

Not content with being the Barnsley Beckenbaue­r, Stones has now morphed into a hybrid of the Kaiser and Patrick Vieira.

Jamie Carragher had other legends in mind when eulogising Stones for his performanc­e in the FA Cup final win over Manchester United, comparing him to Lothar Matthaus and Matthias Sammer.

“He’s an incredible player,” said Pep Guardiola. “Stones has the quality to pass the ball and he can arrive into the attacking positions to control play.”

And, of course, he can defend, as one second-half block on Alejandro Garnacho showed.

Only just 29, Stones has truly come of age and credit for that has to go to the player himself - for his perseveran­ce, for his profession­alism, for his ability to recover from setbacks and emerge as an even better footballer.

Do not forget, Stones was left out of the England set-up for 16 months from November 2019.

And some ominous writing appeared to be on the City wall when - in the summer of 2020 and with Aymeric Laporte and Eric Garcia already on the books - Guardiola signed Ruben Dias and Nathan Ake for a combined £100million.

But Stones is now an essential cog in Pep’s winning machine and while his performanc­es deserve all the acclaim they are getting, the England defender’s stunning form is another testimony to his club manager’s brilliance.

It has not always been easy for Stones under Guardiola, who made the centre-half one of his early signings in the summer of 2016.

Seven years on, Guardiola has redefined Stones’ role and the pair are clearly on the same wavelength. And Erik ten Hag did not produce a strategy to stop Stones having a decisive influence on Saturday.

The Manchester United boss had a plan for Bernardo Silva and Kevin de Bruyne - although even that was foiled by a subtle tactical switch from Guardiola in the second half - but was powerless to prevent Stones dictating the play.

In an era when so many ‘new’ ploys are merely repackaged old ones, the deployment of Stones by Guardiola is a genuine innovation.

Going forward, Stones’ club role should give Gareth Southgate food for thought.

The England manager is fond of using twin midfield pivots and if Stones could double up, then it would give Southgate an extra attacking option.

That is for the future but, for now, it will be fascinatin­g to see how club coaches try to counteract the Stones effect.

Whatever they come up with, Guardiola and Stones (left with Grealish) will probably be one step ahead. “Working with the manager is a dream - he has taught me so much about the game,” said Stones when he signed a new five-year contract in August 2021.

“I feel like I learn something new every day.”

And as a master and pupil combinatio­n goes, there is probably no better one in modern football.

 ?? ?? HIS TIME IS NOW Stones has come of age – as shown in his dominant FA Cup final performanc­e
HIS TIME IS NOW Stones has come of age – as shown in his dominant FA Cup final performanc­e

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