Premier League
CHELSEA LEGEND, GIANLUCA VIALLI RECALLS BATTLE AGAINST CANCER
In a heart touching account, former Chelsea player and coach, Gianluca Vialli in an exclusive interview with Daily Mail of UK has recalled the most harrowing battle of his life and how he made a solemn promise to his 90-year-old father, that he wont die before him.
According to the newspaper, Gianluca Vialli was given the all clear last month after a second bout of cancer
The Italian had been fighting against the disease has given him another chance. On account of the battle he had fought, Vialli who in his career also featured for Sampdoria, Juventus, and Chelsea has released a book
The English version of the book titled “Goals”, was released last week, and it contains inspirational sport stories.
Last month, the former Chelsea player and manager announced that after more gruelling rounds of chemotherapy for a second bout of pancreatic cancer, his doctors had given him the all-clear. And now he feels like he is seeing his life with new eyes.
He feels as if his three-year struggle with cancer has given him a second chance. It made him pause. It gave him time to look at what he was becoming and realise that he did not much care for his direction of travel. He realised he needed, and wanted, to speak to his parents more. He wanted to be a better father to his two teenage daughters and a better husband to his wife Cathryn. He felt he had been standing still. He wanted to learn more about himself.
When the conversation with the Daily Mail reporter, Oliver Holt, got too serious, Vialli leavened it by reverting to poking fun at himself. ‘I still get upset if the pasta is not cooked how I like it,’ he says, ‘but I’ve learned to put things into context. There were things maybe I took for granted and now I realise how valuable they are.’
The Daily Mail account runs thus:
The release last week of the English version of his book, Goals, a collection of 90 inspirational stories from the world of sport, seems particularly timely as society tries to cope with the ongoing agonies and disruption of the coronavirus crisis. Vialli’s story is the last chapter. It is number 90+1, a nod to the idea he has been given the gift of time added on.
His recovery from a form of cancer that is notoriously hard to survive feels like a shaft of light, too. English football always loved Vialli. When he arrived at Stamford Bridge in 1996, we loved him for his humility and his fierce dignity and the eyes that sparkled with self-deprecating humour. Vialli was still a fine player when he came to London even if the best years of his career were behind him but, most of all, he was a man who had class. He has not lost it.
‘Something I think that I’m good at is that I don’t complain,’ says Vialli. ‘I don’t like thinking ‘Why me, why me, why me?’ when I was diagnosed with cancer because that would be hypocritical. I didn’t say ‘Why me?’ when I was one in a thousand who made it as a professional footballer. It is something I needed to go through to become a better person. Maybe, for me, this is what I needed.
‘Have I been brave? I don’t know if that’s the right word. I think I am determined to succeed. I don’t know what brave means. It is only when you are afraid that you can be courageous. So if you don’t overcome any fear, how can you find out who you really are?
‘I was in a place where I was stagnating. My life has always been incredibly exciting: footballer; manager; even the 15 years I have spent as a game analyst at Sky Italia. Preparing yourself before a show, the light of the camera goes off and you need to start passing on your message and you end up talking about football, which I love. I suppose, spiritually, I was into a routine.
‘I wasn’t sort of moving forward. I had stopped searching inside myself. I wasn’t growing. I took cancer as an opportunity to keep growing. This is just my point of view. I don’t expect everybody to share it.
‘Everybody faces cancer in their own way. It was a chance to do stuff I haven’t done for a while. It is about showing gratitude, showing empathy, being scared, wanting to find out how you face a tricky situation, working as a team with your family.
‘I have learned that I had so much to learn about myself. I was in a place where, looking back, I wasn’t particularly pleased. I was not in a good place. By learning that, I hope I am in a better place. I was taking things for granted. Gratitude is one of the most powerful emotions and I wasn’t grateful enough for what I had. Now I’m much more grateful.
‘I’m sorry if I’m sounding like a guru but I wasn’t spiritual enough. I was too superficial. I was getting upset about trivial things and now I put things into context and I know what’s important and what matters and what I should forget.
‘But I also realise I am so far away from being the person that I want to be. I know that every day I get tested and I fail test after test but by realising it, I know I get closer and closer to what I want to become and where I want to be one day.’
Vialli’s recollection of his diagnosis and his treatment is pockmarked with nightmarish recollections of his long journey back to health. He recalls how his eyes were ‘a pale, ugly, yellow’. He recalls looking in the mirror at his skeletal frame. After the initial surgery, he lay semi-conscious in his hospital bed, hearing voices around him saying that the procedure had been a failure and that the cancer had spread throughout his body.
‘I hear them say the operation was useless,’ he writes in Goals, ‘that it has spread everywhere: to the lungs; to the brain; to the stomach. And so I scream, ‘I hear you. I can hear you. I’m awake. I know what you’re saying about me.’
The voices sound alarmed. They say they are not talking about him and fade away but it is a haunting sequence that does not make it clear whether it was real or the dark imaginings of a man afraid that so much that was dear to him might be taken away.
Last week, Vialli, 55, was candid about how scared he still feels. Every time he feels an ache or a pain he thinks ‘it’s back’. It is the curse of anyone who has had cancer; this fear that it has returned. Every time he goes to bed with a temperature he thinks ‘it’s back’. He says that that fear will probably be with him for the rest of his life.
Then there was his dread that he would expose his parents to the horror of losing a child. He could not bear that thought, more for the pain it would cause them than for his own fate. They are in lockdown now at their family home near Cremona, close to the epicentre of Italy’s coronavirus outbreak, but long before that, he made them a vow. ‘I made a solemn promise to my father,’ Vialli says. ‘I told him: ‘I am not going before you or mum.’
I ask him how he could promise that when his prognosis was uncertain and he pauses in the midst of his answer. ‘My father is 90 and my mother is 85,’ says Vialli, ‘and I consider myself extremely lucky that I still have them. Now that I am a parent, I know there could be nothing more painful than losing a child. It was a promise. I didn’t want them to… I wasn’t… I was trying to be unselfish.
‘Of course, I want to live for as long as I can but I definitely didn’t want them to go through the grief of losing a child. That was one goal I set myself: to outlive my parents. It was good for them but it was also a goal for me to achieve and it gave me some strength and desire to be even more positive and do everything possible in order to stay alive.
‘One of the things this journey made me realise was that I have to be closer to my parents. Selfishly, my priority is my children. But I put myself in my parents’ shoes. I am a father, a husband but I am also a son so I need to do my very best in order to make them happy. I didn’t feel this way before I got cancer. It has been an opportunity for me to realise these things.’
And so, despite everything, Vialli is content in lockdown. He still lives in Chelsea. He moved to Hampstead for a short time when he was manager of Watford so he could be closer to the training ground but after he was sacked in June 2002, he moved back to west London. He smiles at the idea that lockdown life is just about standing still and smelling the roses. He disagrees with that. He still has goals.
He is fit enough now to work out every other day with his wife. He is planning to learn to play the drums. He is learning to type ‘with 10 fingers’. He is trying to read more, to think, to meditate, to learn. The front cover of his book is striking. It is his face against the backdrop of a clear blue sky, his eyes closed, a smile playing on his lips. It suggests a man who is emerging from darkness into the sunlight.
And amid it all, he is missing football. It is 18 years since he was fired by Watford but he has worked for Sky Italia for most of the interim and recently he linked up again with his old friend and Sampdoria team-mate, Roberto Mancini, now the Italy coach, when he was named head of the Italian national football team delegation.
‘I have missed the game a lot since the coronavirus crisis began,’ says Vialli. ‘When we are involved in football, we sell memories and we sell emotions. We become addicted to this both in what we give and in what we get back from being part of this.
‘All of a sudden, you can’t witness something live and get that back. It is like an addiction and all of a sudden, it is taken away from you.
‘For one week or two weeks, it is OK because you think it is a chance to recharge your batteries, I will miss it and then when I come back I will enjoy it even more because even something as exciting as football can become something of a routine and now that we have got football on our screens every day, it is like eating caviar every night.
‘So maybe we needed a bit of time off but now it has been far too long. What I really miss is being able to hug people.
‘After 15 years, I have gone back to working in football and I have been able to go back on to a bus on the way to the stadium, with the music pumping and trying to look at the players’ faces and then talking to the manager.
‘And then you hug the players before they go on the football pitch and then the national anthem starts and you’re so excited and so emotional and then after the match you hug the players again.
That was something I was missing when I was out of the game and now I miss it a lot. I got a taste back and now this virus has taken it away from me.’
But lockdown has given him gifts, too. One of the mantras in his book says that life is 10 per cent what happens to you and 90 per cent the way you react to it. He is putting that into practice.
‘For me,’ says Vialli, ‘it is an opportunity to find out about myself and other people.’ Even in Chelsea, there is less traffic. Now he can hear the birdsong.
Premier League
Liverpool stay top of Premier League as Arsenal, Man City win
Liverpool beat Crystal Palace 1-0 to remain top of the Premier League as Arsenal and Manchester City came from behind to win on Saturday.
City were 3-2 victors over Fulham to stay one point behind Liverpool, alongside Arsenal who saw off Southampton 3-1.
Arne Slot has now won nine of his first 10 games since succeeding Jurgen Klopp as Liverpool manager, but was frustrated that the visitors invited a late onslaught from the winless Eagles.
Jota prodded the Reds into the lead from Cody Gakpo’s cross on nine minutes.
The Portuguese international was then guilty of missing two big chances to extend Liverpool’s advantage.
Palace failed to make them pay, but victory came at a cost for Slot as goalkeeper Alisson Becker limped off with a hamstring injury.
“If you score the second you break them mentally,” said Slot. “All the fans kept believing in a result because it was only 1-0, even though in my opinion we were the dominant team.”
Fresh from a dominant win over Paris Saint-Germain in the Champions League, Arsenal were expected to sweep aside winless Southampton.
But the Saints shocked the Emirates 10 minutes into the second half when Cameron Archer fired in his first Premier League goal since a summer move from Aston Villa.
The lead only lasted three minutes before Kai Havertz scored for the seventh consecutive home game.
Gabriel Martinelli was introduced after an hour and took just eight minutes to make his mark with a finish on the volley from Bukayo Saka’s cross.
Having set up Arsenal’s first two goals, Saka pounced on a loose ball to score the third himself.
Fulham’s outrageous opener
Rodri’s season-long absence due to a serious knee injury is expected to be a major blow to City’s chances of retaining the title for a fifth consecutive season.
But it was the Spaniard’s deputy Mateo Kovacic who scored twice to turn the game around for the champions at the Etihad.
The visitors had not lost since the opening night of the season at Manchester United and led thanks to Andreas Pereira’s finish from an outrageous backheel assist by Raul Jimenez.
Kovacic’s deflected effort quickly brought City level before a cleaner strike less than two minutes into the second half made it 2-1.
Jeremy Doku then smashed into the top corner from outside the box to give City a two-goal cushion, which they needed.
Rodrigo Muniz gave Fulham hope on 88 minutes, but City held out for a 17th consecutive win against the Cottagers.
West Ham eased the pressure on new boss Julen Lopetegui by ending a run of three home defeats to start the new season.
Michail Antonio, Mohammed Kudus, Jarrod Bowen and Lucas Paqueta struck for the Hammers in a 4-1 win over Ipswich, who are still waiting for their first Premier League win 22 years.
There were six goals before half-time as Brentford beat Wolves 5-3 to leave the visitors still rooted to the foot of the table.
Leicester secured their first league win of the season as Facundo Buonanotte’s strike beat Bournemouth 1-0.
Manchester United manager Erik ten Hag faces a huge match if he is to remain in charge when the Red Devils visit Aston Villa in the pick of Sunday’s action.
-AFP
Premier League
Premier League rejects City request to delay next season’s games after Club World Cup
The Premier League has rejected Manchester City’s request to postpone the first two games of the 2025-26 season to help the players recover after their FIFA Club World Cup campaign in the U.S., the club’s manager Pep Guardiola said on Friday.
City and Chelsea are the two English clubs who have qualified for the expanded month-long Club World Cup set to start on June 15. The Premier League’s season will begin in August.
An increasingly packed soccer calendar has been a concern among a growing number of players and managers. A report by global players’ union FIFPRO said some players get only 12% of the year to rest.
The Premier League did not immediately respond to a request for comment outside regular business hours.
City midfielder Rodri said in September that players could be close to strike action over the time they are required to play. A knee ligament injury has since put him out for the season.
“I don’t know if we will play more games than the treble year (2022-23)… maybe we’ll play less games,” Guardiola told reporters.
“The Premier League has not allowed us to postpone the first two games for our recovery. Thank you so much. They don’t postpone these games so that will be the moment of, oh, what do we have to do?”
He said the Club World Cup will make it even more difficult for clubs to manage player workload.
-Reuters
Premier League
Ten Hag’s Man United future not my call, Ratcliffe says
Manchester United co-owner Jim Ratcliffe said a decision about under-fire manager Erik ten Hag is not his call, and was reticent about whether he still has faith in the team’s boss amid their worst start to the Premier League season since 1986-87.
“I don’t want to answer that question,” Ratcliffe told the BBC. “I like Erik. I think he’s a very good coach but at the end of the day it’s not my call, it’s the management team that’s running Manchester United that have to decide how we best run the team in many different respects.
“That team that’s running Manchester United has only been together since June or July. They weren’t there in January, February, March or April — Omar (Berrada, CEO), (Sporting Director) Dan Ashworth — they only arrived in July.
“They’ve only been there . . . you can count it in weeks almost — they’ve not been there a long time so they need to take stock and make some sensible decisions.”
Ten Hag’s job was the subject of speculation for much of last season en route to the team’s lowest Premier League finish of eighth. After an FA Cup final victory over Manchester City and an end-of-season review, however, Ten Hag signed a new contract to extend his stay at Old Trafford until 2026.
“Our objective is very clear, we want to take Manchester United back to where it should be, and it’s not there yet, obviously, that’s very clear,” Ratcliffe said.
Ten Hag continues to plead for patience from fans with the team languishing 13th in the Premier League table, having lost three of their six opening games. They were headed towards defeat by Porto in the Europa League on Thursday before Harry Maguire scored a last-gasp goal to salvage a 3-3 draw.
-Reuters
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