UK TimesUK Times
  • Home
  • News
  • TV & Showbiz
  • Money
  • Health
  • Science
  • Sports
  • Travel
  • More
    • Web Stories
    • Trending
    • Press Release
What's Hot

Novak Djokovic admits physical ‘concern’ after first-round win in New York – UK Times

25 August 2025

Rory McIlroy enjoys boys’ night at the US Open tennis after dashing from golf tournament in Atlanta to watch Novak Djokovic

25 August 2025

Homelessness and Rough Sleeping Strategy Action Plan (2025-2030)

25 August 2025
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
UK TimesUK Times
Subscribe
  • Home
  • News
  • TV & Showbiz
  • Money
  • Health
  • Science
  • Sports
  • Travel
  • More
    • Web Stories
    • Trending
    • Press Release
UK TimesUK Times
Home » How Alexander Isak’s actions could HELP Newcastle in Liverpool clash and beyond, writes CRAIG HOPE
TV & Showbiz

How Alexander Isak’s actions could HELP Newcastle in Liverpool clash and beyond, writes CRAIG HOPE

By uk-times.com25 August 2025No Comments6 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Telegram Pinterest Tumblr Reddit WhatsApp Email
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

If one moment captured the conflict of Newcastle United’s summer, it was Alexander Isak driving into the training ground and being forced to wait as an ice-cream van drove out.

The ice-creams had been for the children of his team-mates, all part of a family fun day organised by Eddie Howe. By late afternoon, it was out with the sweets and in with the sour.

It is that bitterness, felt by Isak towards the club and for him by supporters, that makes Monday night’s visit of Liverpool the equivalent of tossing a lit match into a fireworks factory. If Newcastle need to remove the Gallowgate End roof to renovate St James’ Park, the incendiary atmosphere that awaits might just begin phase one of the redevelopment.

The irony of it being played out in the absence of the one man who pulled the pin on his and his club’s summer is not lost. Isak, Newcastle’s only senior striker, will be watching at home. 

But who does he want to win? The club he wants to play for, or the one he is most likely to still be at come September 2? It is that doubt which makes his reintegration so difficult.

Because of all the words bellowed, whispered, screeched and split over Newcastle this summer, there was one that cut through them all – United. It was delivered, very deliberately, by the head coach. On August 3, in a noisy corridor inside Seoul’s World Cup Stadium, where even the walls were sweating, Howe was cool and calculated. He told me then, rendering all those competing sounds redundant, that Isak had to ‘earn the right’ to be with his team-mates.

Alexander Isak pictured driving out of Newcastle United’s training ground on Wednesday

Isak wants to leave Newcastle to join Liverpool, who are visiting St James' Park on Monday

Isak wants to leave Newcastle to join Liverpool, who are visiting St James’ Park on Monday

‘We are Newcastle United,’ he said. His words could yet find their way onto a Wor Flags display on Monday evening, with the supporter group ready to set the tone when the teams walk out into the colosseum. Howe would no doubt like that – he and his staff value greatly the work of Wor Flags – but his chief concern on that claustrophobic night in South Korea was to send a message around the world – to supporters, to his own players, to would-be targets… to Isak.

As Sir Bobby Robson once said, the name on the back means far less than the badge on the front. For Howe, too, no individual is more important than the collective spirit of a squad who have consistently outperformed the sum of its parts.

When Howe left that night for Seoul’s Incheon International Airport, he joked that a 14-hour flight without Wi-Fi might be a welcome relief. When he landed, all might be OK, a flurry of messages revealing that their transfer targets wanted to join and the clubs were willing sellers. That did not happen, of course.

There has since been progress with the arrival of defender Malick Thiaw and midfielder Jacob Ramsey, but still no striker. To sell Isak, they need two. That is extremely unlikely now, say insiders, coupled with a hardened resolve from the top to tell Isak he must stay. Even if open to the possibility, the board have never wanted to sell the team’s best player.

Nor has Howe. Because they believe, with Isak, the squad is not far away from competing at the very top of the Premier League. That is the frustration, that the player they identified three years ago, the player they have developed, the player who has three years to run on his contract, is the one player who is the missing piece in the jigsaw right now.

I stood with Howe and his backroom team in the middle of a parched training pitch in Seoul last month. At the time, the heat was on, in every sense. But to be there was also a reminder of the talent that resides – be that the coaches who have made full internationals of Anthony Gordon, Lewis Hall, Tino Livramento, Dan Burn and Joelinton, or the players in front of us who defied those temperatures during a session of intensity, energy and character.

Seeing new teenage recruit Park Seung-soo leave Fabian Schar in a heap signalled the end of my observation – they did not need any more headlines!

As the Far East tour went on, the improvement in mood and cohesion on the pitch was noticeable. On the first day, after landing to the story Daily Mail Sport had broken of Isak wanting to leave, the Singaporean sunshine made way for a storm. Howe and his players felt that battering. Their first, jet-lagged session was lethargic.

With Isak's future a leading subplot on Monday night, the Geordie crowd will be extra rowdy

With Isak’s future a leading subplot on Monday night, the Geordie crowd will be extra rowdy

Star striker Isak pictured with Newcastle manager Eddie Howe during a game back in January

Star striker Isak pictured with Newcastle manager Eddie Howe during a game back in January

In an elevator at the team hotel, I told Bruno Guimaraes that Arsenal – that weekend’s opponents – had looked very sharp against AC Milan a few days earlier. ‘Oh, f******* hell!’ laughed the captain. In the end, they played well in a 3-2 defeat. But one week on, in Seoul, it felt different. Without Isak, it was interesting to note one drill in which Howe encouraged his midfielders to break the lines, and Guimaraes went clean through on goal more than once.

On the flight to South Korea, the majority of the players watched Happy Gilmore 2, and laughed a lot. Such moments were an escape from what Howe called the ‘constant noise’ around his team, a racket from which he has tried to protect them. On the evidence of last weekend’s goalless draw at Aston Villa, he has done a good job. With Isak – or any striker – Newcastle would have deservedly won that game.

And so that comes back to the feeling of regret felt by Howe, his players and supporters – of Isak, a Newcastle player, refusing to play. They bossed and beat Liverpool in last season’s Carabao Cup final, in which Isak scored. It will, in football terms alone, be far harder to do that without him. Even so, it is because of him, in a roundabout way, that they still stand every chance of beating Liverpool. His actions this summer have guaranteed that a bear pit awaits.

A sour taste lingers on Tyneside, but getting one over on Liverpool would be the sweetest sensation of all.

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Telegram Email

Related News

Rory McIlroy enjoys boys’ night at the US Open tennis after dashing from golf tournament in Atlanta to watch Novak Djokovic

25 August 2025

How jockey who got hooked on meth through racing ruined his Breaking Bad drugs business with one mistake on a Qantas boarding pass

25 August 2025

Revealed: The star who’ll be playing the NRL grand final – and he’s NOWHERE near as well known as the AFL’s Snoop Dogg

25 August 2025

Norman Reedus’ son makes alarming threat after arrest for assault

25 August 2025

Travis Kelce arrives in his $400,000 Rolls Royce for glitzy red carpet Chiefs premiere… but there’s no sign of Taylor Swift

25 August 2025

What Ruben Amorim’s decisions during Fulham draw told us about two Man United stars – and why they will be giving serious consideration to their futures, writes CHRIS WHEELER

25 August 2025
Top News

Novak Djokovic admits physical ‘concern’ after first-round win in New York – UK Times

25 August 2025

Rory McIlroy enjoys boys’ night at the US Open tennis after dashing from golf tournament in Atlanta to watch Novak Djokovic

25 August 2025

Homelessness and Rough Sleeping Strategy Action Plan (2025-2030)

25 August 2025

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest UK news and updates directly to your inbox.

© 2025 UK Times. All Rights Reserved.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

Go to mobile version