
Newcastle star Tino Livramento drops biggest hint on future as he breaks silence on Man City transfer interest
EDDIE HOWE is in 'constant contact' with Tino Livramento as he looks to stave off Manchester City's interest in his star.
And the Newcastle ace, 22, dropped the biggest hint yet that he will still be wearing Black and White next season due to the pair's 'amazing' relationship.
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Pep Guardiola is a huge admirer of the versatile full-back and had been linked with an attempted £30m swoop.
But the City boss looks set to be left disappointed as Livramento prepares to try and break more Spanish hearts tomorrow in Slovakia with England U21s at the Euros.
Asked directly if he will still be a Newcastle player come August, he revealed: 'The manager, I'm in constant contact with him.
'He has just said to keep focusing on what you're doing now and you're doing so well.
'So having that relationship with someone that is obviously such a big figure in what I've done so far, I think is an amazing thing for me.
'I'm very much focused on what I'm doing here now. I don't know anything about that [speculation].
'Being away with the U21s is my main priority. I like to stay in the moment and just focus on what I can do to help the team now.'
One man Livramento knows will be key to Toon's success next season is their 27-goal Swedish superstar Alexander Isak - another player being continually linked with a move to Liverpool.
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The defender said: 'Alex is an unbelievable player. We definitely saw that a lot this season.
'Training against him is obviously a privilege, being at a club like Newcastle and seeing the quality that we have as a team. Being involved in that is only going to make me a better player.
'You see the level that he brings on a Sunday or Saturday as fans, but I see that sort of every single day as a player. It's a real privilege to be in around players like him.'
Livramento's displays for Newcastle earned him a first senior England cap in November.
He went on to play a huge role at Wembley as the Magpies beat Liverpool to end a 70-year major drought in the Carabao Cup final before they went on to clinch Champions League qualification.
Given those big moments at senior level, discussing how much a shootout with Spain for a place in the U21 Euros ranks with them, he said: 'It's massive. I've played in a lot of big games already in my career so I just see it as another challenge, another privilege to be in a situation where the stakes are high and the pressure is on.
'I just see every game as a different challenge and tomorrow's no different. I think when it's a high pressure game, you know, you just stick to what you're good at and then just let the situation take care of itself. We've got a great squad.'
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Meanwhile, England manager Lee Carsley, who guided the Young Lions to victory over Spain in the 2023 final, has every confidence that his current crop can produce a repeat in Trnava - even if the bookies don't.
On Spain being made the favourites, he said: 'I don't feel like an underdog.
'There's a massive expectancy, against Spain, that we can perform and that's all we need to do. 'If we can perform, play to our ability, then we've got a great chance of winning the game.
'Spain are a top team and anyone that was with us in the last Euros, you have to beat all of the top teams and they are a team that I've got a lot of respect for.
'There's definitely a lot more to come from us if we're going to progress.'
England's Under-21 Euros squad in FULL
ENGLAND are looking to retain their status as Under-21 European champions this summer in Slovakia.
Here is Lee Carsley's full squad for the blockbuster tournament:
Goalkeepers: James Beadle (Brighton and Hove Albion), Teddy Sharman-Lowe (Chelsea), Tommy Simkin (Stoke City)
Defenders: Charlie Cresswell (FC Toulouse), Ronnie Edwards (Southampton), CJ Egan-Riley (Burnley), Tino Livramento (Newcastle United), Brooke Norton Cuffy (Genoa), Jarell Quansah (Liverpool)
Midfielders: Elliot Anderson (Nottingham Forest), Archie Gray (Tottenham Hotspur), Hayden Hackney (Middlesbrough), Jack Hinshelwood (Brighton and Hove Albion), Tyler Morton (Liverpool), Alex Scott (AFC Bournemouth)
Forwards: Harvey Elliott (Liverpool), Omari Hutchinson (Ipswich Town), Sam Iling Jnr (Aston Villa), James McAtee (Manchester City), Ethan Nwaneri (Arsenal), Jonathan Rowe (Marseille), Jay Stansfield (Birmingham City)
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Times
an hour ago
- Times
Tommy Freeman tried — but Lions tactics will not work with bad kicking
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These were not bad kicks but they weren't good either. At the highest levels these fine margins are critical. Whereas Mitchell was OK, his opposite number, Gonzalo García, was outstanding. In the opening ten minutes, the tone was set as the Lions chased in vain and Argentina made frequent gains and turnovers. Mitchell must be disappointed with his performance. He failed to kick-start the Lions. As for Freeman, he produced a fabulous example of how to work off his wing. Sweeping from right to left, he persistently carried hard into the midfield of Argentina. Unfortunately, the passes he received were usually a fraction off target, as Scotland's Sione Tuipulotu failed to find the English wing's wavelength. Little combined errors resulted in collective failure. Tuipulotu, the Glasgow Warriors centre, hasn't played much rugby this season; his rustiness was part of Freeman's frustrations in midfield, just as his scrum half's slightly long kicks helped to explain the ineffective chase game. Tuipulotu needs game time. His lack of sharpness is understandable. Mitchell at No9 wasn't bad but nor was he good enough to press for a Test place. Nothing quite fitted for Freeman. It wasn't a memorable night for Fin Smith, either . A poor cross-kick could, maybe should, have conceded a first-half try while penalty kicks to the corner lacked the vicious precision expected. His all-round game was tentative. If anyone questioned Finn Russell's status as Test No10, this game should have ended any such delusions. Nor did things fall the way of Van der Merwe. He showed the reason for his selection, rampaging into midfield once to shatter the defensive plans of opposition analysts, as James Lowe does for Ireland. However he looked positionally weak beneath the high kick. Whereas Freeman was invariably in the right position, the beefy wing on the opposite side was worryingly ten metres out of position beneath one cross-kick, which left Smith isolated and knocking on. There's no doubt that Van der Merwe is a brilliant broken-field operator but with Australia head coach Joe Schmidt hoping to unleash the unique athleticism of Joseph Suaalii in the wider parts of the pitch, the Scot appears vulnerable. It was noticeable that when Mack Hansen emerged from the bench, he offered more industry and variety than the prolific finishing of Van der Merwe. There is no such thing as a good defeat but Farrell's men have only lost a sporting battle (to write 'skirmish' would be to insult Felipe Contepomi's Argentina). There is no shortage of effort or intensity and the serious stuff is yet to come. By the time the Lions play Western Force in Perth next Saturday, their execution will need to be better than it was on a Friday when it was Argentina, despite missing a host of their Top 14 stars, who shone. The 1971 Lions lost to Queensland en route to their one and only series win in New Zealand. Far better in the immediate aftermath of defeat to praise the Pumas rather than panic about the Lions. Friday night's fix can be a relatively quick one, even though this vintage lacks Edwards, John, Davies and JPR. Optus Stadium, PerthSaturday, 11amTV Sky Sports Main Event


Times
an hour ago
- Times
England vs India live: scores and updates from day 2
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Two years on Woakes is central to their thinking and has been for much of the time since he hit the winning runs in Leeds to seal a nerve-jangling Ashes win and finished that summer as man of the series. He has featured in only one of eight Tests in Asia since, was rested in Hamilton and still recovering from an ankle injury at the time of the recent Zimbabwe Test, but has otherwise played every game. Since Jimmy Anderson retired in July last year, he has served as England's attack leader of choice. ● Read in full: Chris Woakes is James Anderson without aura but is just as important Steve James, at Headingley We have seen Yashasvi Jaiswal struggling with cramp before, but that was hardly unexpected when flaying runs for fun in India's heat last year, so to see him battling with the horrible spasms in his right forearm, causing one or two of his fingers to curl up and be difficult to prise back into their usual positions, was surprising, even if these are unusually canicular days right now. But Jaiswal had clearly earned the right to suffer, gripping tightly on to his bat with that top (right) hand as he navigated his way so elegantly and easily through his first Test innings in England to make a splendid century. Yes, maybe the stoppages while he received attention were too long and too frequent (although they did allow the always mischievous Harry Brook to shadow-bat gleefully with his bat) and maybe his stamina could still do with a little attention — there are those who say that the 23-year-old is still catching up in that regard after his tough, well-chronicled upbringing in leaving his home, a village in Uttar Pradesh, at the age of ten to live in a tent on the Azad Maidan in Mumbai — but this was some statement on another foreign shore by the lavishly talented left-hander after Test centuries in Australia and the West Indies. ● Read more: Yashasvi Jaiswal defies cramp for India to justify hype and hoopla Elizabeth Ammon, at Headingley Good morning from Headingley where it's already very warm and sunny. Predicted to be hot and stuffy but there may perhaps be a couple of thunderstorms this afternoon. 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The Independent
an hour ago
- The Independent
Chelsea's Jackson given red card just minutes after coming off the bench
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