Sunday Mirror

Tough at top for Bayern

-

European Round-Up

AMIN YOUNES inpired EINTRACHT FRANKFURT to a 2-1 win over Bundesliga leaders BAYERN MUNICH yesterday.

Frankfurt remain on course for a Champions League spot after Younes scored one and created another for Daichi Kamada as the hosts stretched their unbeaten run to 11 games.

Bayern hit back via Robert Lewandowsk­i’s 26th goal of the season but Frankfurt held on in front of national boss Joachim

Low. While Hansi Flick led Bayern to victory in the FIFA Club World Cup, his side have underwhelm­ed since returning to domestic duties.

And second-placed RB LEIPZIG will be out to take full advantage of Bayern’s slip-up and close the gap to two points by beating HERTHA BERLIN today.

In Serie A, LAZIO boosted their push for a Champions League by earning a 1-0 win over SAMPDORIA.

Luis Alberto’s first-half strike proved the difference.

IF Stoke City’s social media community is anything to go by, February 19 will become some sort of day of remembranc­e in the Potteries.

Ryan’s Day.

Grown Staffordsh­ire men were weeping into their tweets on Friday, there was talk of statues, and tear-stained pleas for the No.17 jersey to be retired.

There were video tributes, distraught Stokies calling for the stadium to be renamed, some too sick to stomach their oatcakes. The momentous occasion? Ryan Shawcross was leaving Stoke City.

It is easy to mock. Even Shawcross himself might have been a little embarrasse­d by the outpouring of emotion on confirmati­on of his departure for a great gig in Miami in Major League Soccer.

But you know what? It was brilliant. It was a reminder of what a player can mean to a club and its community. A reminder of the relationsh­ip that can bond the three.

A community going through a hard time finds escape, finds joy, finds a purpose in its football club.

And they want that club to be represente­d by qualities they would like to think characteri­se themselves. Or would want to characteri­se themselves.

Sure, flamboyant talent is as appreciate­d at Stoke in the same way it is appreciate­d anywhere else. They have had more of it than you might think.

But in Shawcross and in the 14 years in which he led them in the Premier League, to an FA Cup Final and to Europe, they saw someone who, in his commitment, was unflinchin­g, unfussy, uncomplica­ted, uncompromi­sing, uninterest­ed in the bright lights and commercial trappings of fame.

Shawcross is a better footballer than ever given credit for. He deserved internatio­nal recognitio­n more extensive than a cameo against Sweden, in which Zlatan Ibrahimovi­c embarrasse­d the entire

England team, not only Shawcross.

And you do not play over 300 Premier League games without being a fine footballer.

But the reaction of fans to the Shawcross departure is also a reminder that heroes do not have to come with drag-backs and social media profiles, highlights reels and Insta hordes. Unyielding physical commitment still counts.

Of course, beyond the Stoke fanbase, any reflection on his career will include the challenge that badly broke Aaron Ramsey’s leg in early 2010.

If he had his time again, you would like to think Shawcross would not lunge for a ball that had escaped his control and he was not winning back.

Was it reckless? Yes, it was. Was it intentiona­l? Was it malicious? The player says no and no.

Should you believe him? Well, let’s put it this way. If there is one attribute you can give to Shawcross on the evidence of his 14 years at Stoke City, it is, beyond question, honesty.

Rightly or wrongly, the demonisati­on of Shawcross in the aftermath of that incident fitted a convenient media narrative.

Arsenal and Arsene Wenger, pure football. Stoke and Tony Pulis, anti-football.

It was, of course, never as simple as that.

But did a player such as Shawcross make up for a shortfall in stardust with resilience, with loyalty, with leadership and, above all, with an awareness of what the football club he led meant to the people, meant to the community? Quite clearly, he did.

And maybe it is because that type of character is becoming harder and harder to find in modern-day football that Stoke City had a day of remembranc­e on February 19, 2021.

Grown Staffordsh­ire men were weeping into their tweets on Friday, there was talk of statues, and tear-stained pleas for the No.17 jersey to be retired

 ??  ?? YOU GOT IT Eintracht Frankfurt’s Amin Younes
YOU GOT IT Eintracht Frankfurt’s Amin Younes
 ??  ?? ‘‘
‘‘

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom