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Angus Fitton to join Bentley Motors as Chief Communications Officer

Bentley Motors today announced that Angus Fitton has been appointed Chief Communications Officer with responsibility for all global product and corporate communications as well as internal communications at the manufacturer of luxury cars based in Crewe, England. He succeeds Wayne Bruce who moves to a new role within Bentley as Director of Visitor Experience and Heritage. Both will report to Bentley’s Chairman and CEO, Dr. Frank-Steffen Walliser.

Angus joins Bentley from Porsche Cars North America where he held the position of Vice President of PR based in Atlanta for seven years. Prior to this, he led communications at Porsche Cars Great Britain before relocating with his family to the United States, meaning his move to Crewe will mark a return to the United Kingdom. A life-long car enthusiast, he has occupied communications roles at Mercedes-Benz, Jaguar and Volkswagen having transitioned into PR from an early career in journalism – a path similar to that taken by Wayne Bruce.

During his time at Porsche, Angus contributed to several ambitious and exciting projects – including ‘Edith’, a special Porsche 911 that climbed a volcano to set a world altitude record, a project that was the idea of (and led by) Dr. Frank-Steffen Walliser.

Wayne Bruce, who Angus replaces, will be appointed Director of Visitor Experience and Heritage after more than six years in the communications role. In this new position, Wayne will be responsible for growing the visitor and customer offering around the Crewe site, while continuing with lead responsibility for the Heritage Collection he first instigated, with more exciting developments being planned for the future. He also remains as Head of the Bentley Foundation.

Commenting on the appointments, Frank said: “Wayne has been an exceptional steward of Bentley’s global communications, shaping our voice through a period of significant transformation for the brand. I want to thank him for his leadership, creativity, and unwavering commitment to Bentley Motors.

“As we look to the future, I am delighted to welcome Angus Fitton as our new Chief Communications Officer. Angus brings deep industry experience, a modern strategic mindset, and a passion for storytelling that aligns perfectly with our ambitions. Under his leadership, I am confident that Bentley’s communications will continue to evolve, inspire, and reflect the pioneering spirit that defines our company.”

“I am grateful to Frank and the board of Bentley Motors for this opportunity to join an incredible team at an exciting moment for the brand,” said Angus. “Wayne and his communications team have delivered extraordinary work and I look forward to getting started and building on the fantastic example he has set.”

Both appointments will be effective from Monday 16 March allowing Angus time to understand exactly how his classic 1968 Dodge Charger will find its way to Crewe. Meanwhile, Wayne’s collection of Audis continue to plough up and down the M6 motorway.

Love at first dig: giant JCB stops Londoners in their tracks

A full sized JCB digger dressed up like a collector’s scale model stole a few hearts on Valentine’s Day – and stopped Londoners in their tracks outside an iconic railway station.

The ‘JCB Backhoe in a Box’ drew huge crowds when it was first unveiled at the digger maker’s World HQ in Rocester, Staffordshire. Now the capital is digging the love for this innovative display as it arrives in London – proving romance really does come in all shapes and sizes, even giant, beautifully boxed ones.

The JCB Backhoe in a Box – a full-sized digger presented as though it were a scale model – has been carefully dismantled in Staffordshire and, transported south, before being lovingly reassembled and unveiled on Valentine’s Day outside King’s Cross railway station.

The striking installation will be on display for a full week from February 14th, giving commuters, visitors and Valentine’s Day couples the perfect spot for a memorable photo. Standing nearly 15 feet high and more than 20 feet across in its special packaging, the life size display is impossible to miss. Visitors to King’s Cross can enjoy the exhibit day or night, with the installation illuminated after dark to ensure the magic continues long after the evening commute.

JCB Deputy Chairman George Bamford said: “There’s no better day to celebrate something you love than Valentine’s Day – and Britain has loved the JCB backhoe loader for more than 70 years.”

JCB Worldwide Events Manager Alice Taylor has helped oversee the installation. She said: “King’s Cross is always buzzing, but this installation brings something truly unique to the area. It’s fantastic to engineer some romance in London by unveiling the Backhoe in a Box in London on Valentine’s Day.”

Its appearance in London marks the start of a UK-wide tour celebrating both JCB innovation and the enduring appeal of one of Britain’s best known machines – invented by JCB in 1953. The next stop will be the Cheltenham Festival in March. First unveiled at JCB’s World HQ as part of the company’s 80th anniversary celebrations, the Backhoe in a Box is a playful nod to the popular 1:32 scale models cherished by enthusiasts.

Leasing.com Stadium Ready for FA Cup Night as Macclesfield Welcome Brentford

A packed Leasing.com Stadium hosts a landmark FA Cup fourth-round tie on Monday night, with Macclesfield FC taking on Brentford in a one-off knockout night that offers the underdogs a rare national stage and the Premier League visitors a familiar warning: the competition has a habit of punishing anyone who treats it like a formality.

Tickets are sold out, the match is live on TNT Sports, and with no replay available, extra time and penalties will decide it if the scores are level after 90 minutes.

The story of how Macclesfield reached this point is already one of the season’s defining cup narratives. A 2–1 win over Crystal Palace in the previous round delivered a shock that travelled far beyond Cheshire, with Paul Dawson’s first-half header setting the tone before Isaac Buckley-Ricketts doubled the lead, and the Silkmen holding on through a tense finish.

That result wasn’t built on a lucky bounce or a single moment; it came with real intent, a willingness to compete physically and tactically, and a refusal to let the occasion overwhelm them—exactly the traits needed again here against opponents who will expect to control territory and possession.

Recent form suggests the hosts won’t arrive merely hoping for a story. The last game played in any competition ended in a 3–1 National League North win over Leamington on 10 February, reinforcing a strong run that has kept Macclesfield in the play-off picture and underlined their ability to score goals in bunches at home.

Confidence has been helped by the clarity of their approach under John Rooney, whose side have repeatedly been described—by those who watched the Palace upset closely—as relentless in duels, quick to second balls, and bold enough to take shots and chances rather than simply sit in.

Brentford’s most recent outing came on 12 February, drawing 1–1 with Arsenal in the Premier League. After falling behind, the response arrived through Keane Lewis-Potter’s equaliser, another reminder of the Bees’ capacity to stay in games and find a way back even against elite opposition. That point followed a run of strong away results that has boosted belief, but it also lands right in the middle of the kind of congested calendar that forces difficult selection calls, especially when a lower-league opponent will treat every duel like it’s the last.

The visitors’ route to this round was more straightforward on paper, winning 2–0 at Sheffield Wednesday at Hillsborough, but the context of this trip is anything but routine. The club’s own build-up has emphasised lessons from Macclesfield’s Palace performance: manage the occasion, avoid cheap turnovers that ignite the crowd, and be ruthless on set pieces—an area where Brentford have built a strong reputation and will see as a major opportunity if pressure is sustained. There is also a notable selection note already confirmed: Kaye Furo is set to feature, marking a first appearance in this fixture and adding a fresh talking point within the squad.

Injury and availability provides another strand. Brentford have confirmed that Josh Dasilva remains sidelined, while Fábio Carvalho and Antoni Milambo are out for the rest of the campaign due to ACL injuries. There was also a suspension situation around Kevin Schade in the days leading into the Arsenal match, and while that specific detail may shift from game to game, it underlines the broader theme: this is a squad still juggling absences and discipline issues as the schedule bites. On Macclesfield’s side, the club’s match preview for the tie focused on logistics and the scale of the occasion rather than listing a detailed medical update, so there is no confirmed late injury bulletin from that source to point to in the public build-up.

Form players are easier to identify. For the hosts, Dawson and Buckley-Ricketts naturally carry headline value after deciding the Palace upset, while the captain’s influence in midfield—both in winning duels and setting the emotional tone—remains central to how this team competes. The manager’s own identity also matters here: John Rooney knows the club deeply and has leaned into a high-intensity approach that can turn a match into a series of uncomfortable moments for opponents.

For Brentford, Lewis-Potter arrives off a goal against the league leaders, and Dango Ouattara has been highlighted by the club as a player in good form after delivering decisive moments in recent matches, offering pace and threat in the areas where a non-league side can be stretched if the game opens up.

All of which points toward a cup tie shaped by game state and nerve. Macclesfield’s path to making this special again is clear: start fast, make the stadium count, keep the contest physical and emotional, and turn dead-ball situations into genuine pressure. Brentford’s job is equally obvious: impose control early, avoid the cheap giveaways that fuel belief, and let quality—and set-piece efficiency—make the difference before the night becomes a test of anxiety as much as football.

With no replay as a safety net and a full house ready to believe, this is exactly the kind of FA Cup evening where the favourite’s professionalism is tested from the first whistle, not the last.

Arsenal 4-0 Wigan: Gunner’s 27-Minute Blitz Blows Away Wigan

Arsenal barely gave Wigan Athletic time to breathe today as a ferocious first-half burst turned a supposed cup banana skin into a one-sided stroll, with the Premier League leaders storming into the FA Cup fifth round courtesy of a commanding 4-0 win at the Emirates.

The tie was effectively settled inside the opening half-hour, when Arsenal’s intensity, pace, and precision overwhelmed a Wigan side still trying to steady itself amid off-field turbulence, and by the time the clock ticked past 27 minutes the visitors were simply fighting to stop the scoreline becoming truly ugly rather than dreaming of an upset.

Mikel Arteta’s plan was obvious from the first whistle: start fast, press high, play forward, and make the game about Arsenal’s legs and combinations rather than Wigan’s resistance. Even with heavy rotation, Arsenal looked unusually connected for a cup line-up, with players making sharp, aggressive runs and the ball moving quickly into dangerous areas.

There was a slight pre-match reshuffle—Riccardo Calafiori was forced out late and Bukayo Saka stepped into the side, while Martin Ødegaard missed out with a soreness issue—and it only seemed to add edge rather than uncertainty. Arsenal’s early waves kept Wigan pinned, and the decisive theme of the afternoon emerged immediately: whenever Arsenal found space between the lines, they attacked it at speed and with purpose.

The breakthrough arrived on 11 minutes, and it set the tone for everything that followed. Eberechi Eze, dropping deeper to get on the ball and dictate the angle of attacks, split Wigan open with a perfectly weighted pass, and Noni Maduekefinished confidently to make it 1-0. Seven minutes later the pattern repeated with even more ruthlessness: Eze again found the killer lane, Gabriel Martinelli burst through and made it 2-0, and suddenly the game felt like it was slipping away from Wigan in real time. Before Wigan could regroup, Arsenal had a third on 23 minutes—a cross turned into the net by defender Jack Hunt under pressure—and then a fourth arrived on 27 minutes when Gabriel Jesus exploited space behind the line and lifted a composed finish over the goalkeeper after a ball over the top caught Wigan flat-footed. Four goals, four different kinds of damage, and Wigan were left staring at a mountain with two-thirds of the match still to play.

To Wigan’s credit, they didn’t fold into total collapse. The next phase became about pride, organisation, and damage limitation, and the visitors did at least find a foothold by tightening up their shape and making the game scrappier. Arsenal still had moments to extend the lead—Viktor Gyökeres’ deflected effort thudded off the woodwork and Martinelli had opportunities to add gloss—but the frantic edge of the opening half-hour was naturally difficult to sustain once the tie was essentially done. Wigan’s defensive adjustments slowed the bleeding, and their goalkeeper was kept busy in the second half, producing saves that prevented the night turning into a headline-grabbing rout. Arsenal, meanwhile, were happy to manage the rhythm, protect legs, and cruise home without taking unnecessary risks.

There were still a couple of moments that reminded Arsenal why clean sheets matter in knockout football. Kepa Arrizabalaga, largely a spectator during Arsenal’s early storm, had to stay switched on to deny a close-range chance and then push away a threatening effort heading toward the corner, ensuring Wigan’s brief second-half uptick didn’t bring an unwanted wrinkle to an otherwise serene afternoon. For Arsenal, the game became less about piling on goals and more about controlling emotions, spreading minutes, and keeping the squad in good shape for the fixtures that matter just as much—if not more—over the next few weeks.

After the match, Arteta’s view was almost entirely about the opening intensity and what it said about his squad. He was pleased with how quickly the rotated group clicked, pointing to the pace and directness of Arsenal’s early play, and he emphasised that giving minutes to players who needed them is only useful if the team’s standards stay high. In his words, the first half made the difference, and he highlighted the “intention” Arsenal showed from the first minutes as well as the “connection” between players who haven’t always shared the pitch together—an endorsement of depth and attitude rather than just talent.

Wigan’s caretaker boss Graham Barrow tried to balance honesty with encouragement. He didn’t sugar-coat the brutal start, admitting disappointment at the goals conceded, but he praised how his players recovered from being 4-0 down and dug in to prevent further embarrassment. Barrow singled out the second half as something to build on, noting that a switch of shape helped steady the team, and his broader message was about spirit: Arsenal were “relentless,” he said, but Wigan stuck together, gave everything, and must take that resilience back into the league fight ahead.

In the end, this was a cup tie decided by Arsenal’s early fury. Eze’s passing set the tempo, Madueke and Martinelli punished space with conviction, the own goal underlined the pressure Wigan were under, and Jesus’ finish completed a 27-minute demolition job that made everything afterwards feel like a formality.

Arsenal move on with minimal fuss, another clean sheet, and another reminder that when they start at full throttle, they can turn even a knockout match into a controlled exercise. Wigan leave with a bruising lesson from the first half—and a small measure of credit for refusing to let it become worse once the storm hit.

Stoke City 1-2 Fulham: Reed Punishes Late Blunder To Dump Stoke Out of the FA Cup

Fulham booked their place in the FA Cup fifth round today with a 2-1 comeback win over Stoke City at the bet365 Stadium, but they had to earn it the hard way—first by weathering a sharp Stoke start, then by raising their level after the interval, and finally by seizing on one late mistake that decided the tie.

Stoke, desperately needing a lift, looked the hungrier side early on and were rewarded when Jun-Ho Bae finished off a slick move to put the Potters ahead, sending the home crowd into full voice.

Fulham, heavily rotated and initially a touch loose in possession, gradually found their rhythm through the first half, and when they turned the screw in the second period they overpowered Stoke for long spells, equalising through a lively Kevin before Harrison Reed’s alert interception and calm finish completed the turnaround.

The opening exchanges set the tone for an intense cup afternoon. Stoke showed aggression without the ball and purpose with it, snapping into challenges and trying to move Fulham around quickly rather than letting them settle into their passing. They also carried a threat from early deliveries, and the match could have tilted even sooner when Ashley Phillips arrived at the back post from a floated set piece but couldn’t keep his effort on target.

That miss didn’t dent Stoke’s confidence; if anything it sharpened it, and Stoke kept asking questions down the flanks—especially when they could pull Fulham’s full-backs into awkward defensive positions and then attack the space behind them.

Stoke’s breakthrough on 19 minutes was the best piece of football in the match from either side: a move built on good positioning and smart decisions, ending with Bae timing his run perfectly and smashing a high-quality finish past Benjamin Lecomte. It was a goal that captured Stoke’s early intent—positive, brave, and direct—and for a while it felt like Fulham were going to have to grind their way back into it. Fulham did create moments before half-time, but they arrived more as flashes than sustained pressure.

Kevin was the spark, repeatedly carrying the ball into dangerous areas, and Stoke goalkeeper Tommy Simkin had to be sharp to keep out a curling effort that looked destined for the top corner. Fulham also came close when Kevin turned provider and picked out Alex Iwobi in space, only for the midfielder to glance his header wide when he might have done better. Even then, Stoke still looked capable of hurting Fulham on the break, and the first half ended with the home side protecting their lead with a mix of compact defending and timely counters.

The second half began with Stoke briefly showing they still had teeth. A good defensive intervention turned into a quick transition, Lamine Cissé surged forward, and his curling strike forced Lecomte into a fingertip save that pushed the ball onto the post—an important moment because a 2-0 lead would have changed the entire shape of the contest.

Instead, Fulham survived that scare and immediately struck back with a goal that shifted momentum. On 55 minutes Kevin—who had been Fulham’s main threat all afternoon—cut inside from the left and hit a first-time effort low into the corner, a finish full of conviction that finally turned Fulham’s possession into something concrete. At 1-1, Stoke’s legs started to feel the work they’d done earlier, and Fulham suddenly looked like the Premier League side: sharper movement, quicker combinations, and far more players arriving in the final third.

For the next 20 minutes it became wave after wave toward the Stoke box. Fulham flooded forward with runners, recycled attacks quickly, and forced Stoke into a series of clearances and blocks that gradually sapped the home side’s composure. Stoke were still fighting—throwing bodies into challenges and trying to reset their defensive line between attacks—but the game had swung. Fulham’s full-backs pushed higher, midfielders stepped onto second balls, and Stoke were pushed deeper and deeper, reduced to hanging on and hoping the pressure would pass.

The decisive moment arrived six minutes from time, and it was exactly the kind of ruthless, streetwise act that separates teams in tight cup ties. Under pressure, Simkin attempted a short pass out from the back toward Tatsuki Seko, but the touch and awareness weren’t there. Harrison Reed anticipated it, nipped in to steal possession, and finished calmly to make it 2-1—an opportunistic goal, yes, but also a goal born from Fulham’s sustained pressing and Stoke’s inability to relieve the pressure cleanly. The stadium’s mood flipped instantly: Stoke stunned, Fulham celebrating, and the final minutes turning into a frantic search for one last chance that never truly arrived.

After the match, Fulham boss Marco Silva’s message was shaped by both relief and standards. He was pleased with how his side responded after going behind—especially the way they controlled the second half and kept pushing until the breakthrough came—but he also made it clear that the first-half sloppiness and lack of sharpness isn’t something he wants to see repeated. In his view, Fulham’s improvement after the interval was built on better tempo, better decision-making in the final third, and greater intensity without the ball, and he pointed to Kevin’s impact and Reed’s alertness as perfect examples of players taking responsibility in key moments. Most of all, Silva stressed the simple truth of knockout football: you don’t always get a perfect performance, but you must find a way to progress.

Stoke manager Mark Robins, meanwhile, took pride from the way his team started and the quality of the opening goal, but he couldn’t hide the frustration at how the tie slipped away. He felt Stoke had moments that could have changed the game—Phillips’ early chance, the post-hit effort early in the second half—and he was disappointed they couldn’t find the second goal that would have given them real breathing space. The equaliser, from his perspective, came at a time when Stoke were beginning to suffer, and the winner was the hardest part to take: a self-inflicted error after a long defensive effort. Robins’ overall view was that the performance deserved more than the outcome, but the lesson was painfully clear—against top-flight opposition, one lapse in concentration can undo an hour of good work.

Fulham move on, and they’ll take confidence from the character of the comeback and the control they eventually imposed. Stoke, despite the heartbreak, at least showed a blueprint of how they can hurt higher-level teams—intensity, bravery, and direct attacking intent—yet they also got a harsh reminder of how unforgiving this competition can be when fatigue hits and decisions get rushed. In the end it was Bae’s quality that gave Stoke hope, Kevin’s drive that brought Fulham level, and Reed’s sharp instincts that settled a cup tie decided by one costly second.

Emirates Awaits as Arsenal Host Wigan with FA Cup Fifth-Round Place at Stake

A place in the FA Cup fifth round is up for grabs at the Emirates Stadium on Sunday, with Arsenal welcoming Wigan Athletic for a 4:30pm GMT kick-off in a tie that brings together Premier League title ambition and League One survival anxiety, but with the same knockout stakes for both.

The hosts arrive top of the league and still active on multiple fronts, yet recent results have shown just enough vulnerability to keep complacency off the agenda, while the visitors travel to north London knowing a single well-executed plan—and one defining moment—can turn a “free hit” into a famous afternoon.

The most recent outing in any competition for Arsenal was Thursday’s 1–1 draw away at Brentford, a game that left a familiar feeling: plenty of control for long spells, but not quite enough ruthlessness to turn it into three points. Even so, form over the past couple of weeks has included a statement 3–0 league win over Sunderland on 7 February, highlighted by Viktor Gyökeres’ second-half brace, which underlined the depth of match-winners available even when performances are not perfect. In the cup, the route to this stage was emphatic too, with a 4–1 third-round win at Portsmouth driven by a Gabriel Martinelli hat-trick after an early scare.

Wigan’s latest match brought disappointment rather than momentum, losing 2–1 at home to Reading on 10 February, a result that kept the Latics anchored in the relegation fight and added urgency to their league priorities. The FA Cup has provided a different storyline, though, and the third round delivered a genuine scalp: a 1–0 win away at Championship side Preston North End to earn this trip to the Emirates. That alone is enough to ensure this isn’t treated as a formality—cup upsets rarely need a pattern, just a platform.

Team news is set to be a key part of the narrative. Arsenal’s midfield and attacking options are shaped by confirmed absences and a major question mark: Mikel Merino remains sidelined following foot surgery, Kai Havertz is also out with a muscle issue, and Martin Ødegaard has been managing a knee problem after the Brentford game, with the captain described as “not too bad” but unlikely to feature.

There have also been recent fitness concerns around Jurrien Timber, and William Saliba missed the Brentford match through illness, though that has been framed as short-term. Bukayo Saka has recently been described as fit again following a minor issue, but the wider theme is clear: rotation may be influenced as much by availability and workload as by any desire to tinker.

Wigan’s injury picture is less clearly defined in the public briefings available, but there is at least one notable positive: defender Jason Kerr has recently returned from a long layoff and completed 90 minutes, a timely boost for a side likely to need every ounce of organisation and leadership in a hostile stadium.

Off the pitch, there has also been turbulence, with reporting noting the recent dismissal of manager Ryan Lowe as the club fights to avoid dropping into League Two—context that can either unsettle a squad or galvanise it for a one-off occasion like this.

As for players in form, the headlines naturally lean toward Arsenal’s established difference-makers and the men who have delivered in big moments recently. Gyökeres comes in off that brace against Sunderland, while Martinelli’s Portsmouth hat-trick remains the sharpest cup reminder of how quickly a tie can be flipped once the first goal lands.

For Wigan, Joe Taylor’s output in League One has made him a central threat, and he was also on the scoresheet in the recent league defeat to Reading, offering a clear focal point for any transition-based plan the visitors can execute.

All of it points toward a familiar FA Cup dynamic: one side expected to progress, the other encouraged by the absence of expectation. If Arsenal start fast, press with intent and score early, the task becomes about control and avoiding the kind of game state that invites nerves; if Wigan can keep the first half-hour tight, win second balls and turn set plays into pressure, the afternoon can quickly become uncomfortable for a favourite balancing multiple priorities.

Tim Robinson has been appointed as referee for the tie, and with no replay available at this stage, the margin for error—on selection, on finishing, on discipline—shrinks with every minute it stays level.

Bet365 Stadium Braced for FA Cup Test as Stoke City Welcome Fulham

Sunday afternoon in Stoke-on-Trent brings a properly intriguing FA Cup fourth-round tie, with Stoke City hosting Fulham at the bet365 Stadium for a 2pm kick-off and a place in the last 16 on the line.

The competition’s recent tweaks ensure there is no safety net if the game finishes level—extra time and penalties will decide it on the day—adding a sharper edge to a meeting shaped by contrasting divisions, crowded schedules and a heavy dose of selection uncertainty.

The most recent evidence of Stoke’s mood comes from a narrow Championship defeat in midweek. A 1–0 loss at Charlton Athletic on 11 February, decided by Tyreece Campbell’s late goal, ended an encouraging early-2026 away run and left Mark Robins looking for a quick reaction. That result matters for more than the table: it highlighted how fine the margins have been, with the Potters having enough of the ball to feel they should have found more penetration, yet still leaving London empty-handed. With cup football offering a different emotional pitch—less grind, more jeopardy—this is a chance to turn frustration into urgency rather than allowing it to linger.

Fulham’s last outing carried a different kind of sting, a 3–0 Premier League defeat away at Manchester City on 11 February where the damage was done in a ruthless first-half spell. Marco Silva’s side never truly settled into the contest after falling behind, and while few teams are judged on what happens at the Etihad, the performance still reinforced the challenge Fulham have faced in patches this season: handling intense pressure without letting the game run away from them. This trip offers an immediate chance to reset that feeling, but doing so at an often-unforgiving ground—and against an opponent with nothing to lose—brings its own risk.

The road to this stage offers Stoke a clear reason to believe they can make this uncomfortable. The Potters booked their fourth-round place by beating Coventry City 1–0 in the third round, with Lamine Cisse scoring late to settle it. That moment has become an obvious talking point in the build-up because it underlines a familiar FA Cup truth: you don’t need sustained dominance to progress if you can keep structure, stay alive and land one decisive strike.

Fulham’s route was more dramatic and more expansive, coming from behind to beat Middlesbrough 3–1 at Craven Cottage, with goals from Harry Wilson, Emile Smith Rowe and Kevin. That comeback is a useful reference point here, because it suggests Silva’s side can absorb a difficult start and still find solutions—an attribute that becomes vital when the atmosphere turns and the favourite is expected to respond.

Selection, however, is where the tie starts to get particularly interesting. Stoke’s injury list is significant, and it has grown again at an awkward time. Fulham’s own matchday preview notes that Bosun Lawal suffered a hamstring injury and joins a group of absentees that includes Viktor Johansson, Junior Tchamadeu, Lewis Baker, Sam Gallagher, Divin Mubama and Gavin Bazunu. When a squad carries that many confirmed misses, the shape of the game changes: continuity becomes harder, the bench has fewer like-for-like solutions, and the plan often leans more heavily on organisation and set-piece efficiency.

Fulham’s availability picture is lighter by comparison, but there are still notable midfield absences. Silva has confirmed that Saša Lukić and Tom Cairney will miss the trip. That matters because both influence how Fulham control games—Lukić in screening and circulation, Cairney in link play and tempo—so the visitors’ ability to dictate rhythm may depend on how well the alternative midfield combinations handle Stoke’s physicality and the stadium’s energy.

Form players on both sides add another layer to the story. Cisse is the obvious name for the hosts, not just because he scored the third-round winner, but because moments like that can lift a squad’s belief in a one-off cup tie; if the game stays level late on, confidence in “one chance being enough” becomes powerful.

For Fulham, the attacking reference points are clearer in the numbers: Wilson has been their leading Premier League scorer this season, with Raúl Jiménez also among the primary sources of goals. Their threat is not just about finishing, either—delivery, second-phase pressure and the ability to turn territory into repeated chances often decide these ties, particularly if Stoke’s defensive structure is forced into long spells without the ball.

All of this sets up a match that could swing sharply depending on the opening 20 minutes. If Stoke can start quickly, win duels, and keep Fulham from settling into their passing patterns, the tie has the potential to become the kind of emotional, stop-start contest where underdogs thrive and favourites get twitchy.

If Fulham establish early control, move the ball cleanly through midfield despite the absences, and turn pressure into an early goal, the afternoon can quickly become about managing the game state and avoiding the chaos that the FA Cup loves to create. With no replay as a fallback and both teams arriving off defeats in their last matches, the ingredients are there for a cup tie that feels tense, physical and decided by a handful of defining moments rather than a long spell of dominance.

Burton 0-1 West Ham United: Summerville Saves West Ham After Extra-Time Slog at Burton

West Ham United are into the next round of the FA Cup, but they had to suffer for it, edging past Burton Albion 1-0 after extra time in a tie that stubbornly refused to open up until the 95th minute. For long spells at the Pirelli Stadium, Burton looked more comfortable, more urgent and—crucially—more likely to turn pressure into something meaningful.

West Ham, heavily rotated and often disjointed, spent large parts of the afternoon trying to find rhythm rather than dictating it. The Premier League side eventually got the moment they needed through Crysencio Summerville, whose shot took a telling deflection on its way in, and then had to dig even deeper when Freddie Potts was sent off soon after, leaving them to protect their slender lead with ten men for a tense finish.

The day had an odd, stop-start feel even before the football properly began. Kick-off was delayed by a few minutes due to a problem with the net, and later the match was paused again for a medical emergency in the crowd, adding to a sense that this was never going to be a smooth, routine cup afternoon. When play settled, Burton fed off the occasion brilliantly. They pressed with energy, snapped into challenges, and tried to make the pitch feel small—closing passing lanes and forcing West Ham into sideways circulation rather than clean progression through midfield. For a lower-league side, their belief was obvious: they weren’t just hanging on and hoping; they were actively trying to make West Ham uncomfortable, pushing bodies into duels and showing real intent whenever the ball went wide.

West Ham’s selection told its own story. With so many changes, partnerships looked unfamiliar and decision-making didn’t have the usual speed you’d expect from a top-flight team. They had plenty of the ball, but it rarely turned into the sort of attacks that force defenders into panic. Burton’s shape held, their centre-backs were aggressive in the air, and their midfielders kept recovering second balls—those loose, bouncing moments that often decide cup ties when quality drops and the game becomes a contest of concentration. Burton also carried a set-piece threat and, in the first half, they felt like the side more capable of landing a punch. There was a major flashpoint too, with Burton convinced they should have had a penalty during the opening period, but the referee waved play on and there was no VAR to intervene. That decision only fuelled the home crowd and Burton’s growing sense that this was there for them if they stayed brave.

For West Ham, the frustration was that even when they did work the ball into decent areas, the final action—one extra touch, one slightly overhit pass, one cross arriving a yard too close to the goalkeeper—kept killing moves. Burton’s defensive line rarely had to sprint toward its own goal, which is usually the giveaway that a favourite is truly on top. Instead, the match drifted through spells of control for West Ham and disruption from Burton, with neither goalkeeper forced into a sequence of saves that would suggest a goal was inevitable.

As the second half wore on, the tension grew. Burton, understandably, began to feel the weight of what they were chasing: this would be a famous scalp, and every near break, every half-chance, every corner carried the roar of possibility. West Ham, meanwhile, seemed increasingly desperate to avoid the extra half-hour that can level the playing field even further—fatigue blunts class, and one mistake can undo everything. Yet the 90 minutes finished goalless, and extra time arrived with both teams looking like they knew the next goal—if it came at all—would probably decide it.

Five minutes into the additional period, it finally did. Summerville picked up the ball, shifted across the face of the box, and struck through traffic. The shot took a deflection that wrong-footed the goalkeeper and suddenly the match had a narrative: West Ham had the lead, Burton had to chase, and the underdog’s dream was in danger of slipping away. It was the kind of moment that often separates levels: not a flowing team goal, but one player creating enough space to get a strike away—and fortune helping with the bounce.

If that wasn’t dramatic enough, the game’s temperature rose again shortly afterwards. Potts flew into a challenge and was shown a red card, leaving West Ham to defend for their lives. For Burton, it was an immediate surge of hope: a man advantage, a crowd sensing one last swing, and time to force the ball into the danger zone again and again. They pushed forward, pumped crosses into the box and tried to turn every throw-in and set-piece into chaos. West Ham’s response was exactly what you’d expect from a team suddenly thinking only about survival—clear lines, win headers, slow the game down, protect the central channel and accept that possession no longer matters.

Burton’s problem, cruelly, was the same issue that had haunted them earlier: the decisive final moment. They got into good areas, they worked opportunities to deliver, but too many crosses lacked bite, too many attacking decisions arrived a beat late, and when the ball did land in the box, West Ham bodies kept appearing to get something—anything—on it. It became a test of focus and organisation for the visitors. Ten men or not, they held their positions, cleared repeatedly, and relied on experience to manage the frantic rhythm that Burton were trying to create.

After the match, the managers’ reflections landed in two very different emotional places. West Ham boss Nuno Espírito Santo was clearly relieved to be through, but the tone of his assessment inevitably centred on improvement: the need for sharper combinations, a more ruthless edge, and better control so the team doesn’t allow opponents to grow into belief. He also leaned into the realities of cup football—how lower-league sides make you fight for every yard, how patience can become anxiety, and how once you finally score, you still have to defend the moment properly. The red card, in particular, turned the last part of extra time into a resilience exercise; from his perspective, that meant praising the concentration and work-rate his side showed after going down to ten, even if he’d rather not have needed that emergency response in the first place.

For Gary Bowyer, Burton’s head coach, the overriding feeling was pride mixed with frustration. Pride because his side competed toe-to-toe for 90 minutes and made a Premier League team look ordinary for long stretches; frustration because the game was there to be taken if the final ball had been cleaner or if one key moment had dropped their way. His view of the performance focused on the bravery Burton showed—pressing, staying organised, and refusing to be overawed—and on the thin margin that decided it: one deflected shot in extra time. He also pointed back to the big incidents that can define underdog stories, particularly the first-half penalty shout, and the fact that even with a man advantage late on, Burton couldn’t quite turn pressure into the single touch that changes everything.

In the end, West Ham progress, but they don’t leave with the aura of a team that cruised. They leave with a lesson and a warning: rotation and reputation mean nothing if rhythm doesn’t follow, and cup ties punish teams that assume the breakthrough will simply arrive. Burton leave with disappointment, but also with evidence that their approach, energy and discipline can rattle far bigger opponents. For 94 minutes they kept the dream alive, and for the final stretch they threw everything at it. The difference was one moment of quality—and one deflection—that tilted the tie away from a cup upset and toward hard-earned relief for the visitors.

Football Has Lost Its Patience and It’s Taking Society With It

Football used to be a long game played at short speed. Ninety minutes decided a match, but seasons decided legacies. Managers arrived with a philosophy, a blueprint, and the expectation that the first coat of paint would look patchy before the walls started to shine.

Now the sport behaves like it’s doom-scrolling its own existence. One bad half and the crowd wants a new manager. One awkward press conference and the forums light the torches. One run of draws and the word “project” becomes a punchline.

And it isn’t just football. It’s us.

We’re living in an age that treats time like a nuisance. Everyone wants results at the tap of a screen. Delivery by tomorrow. Answers in seconds. Success without the awkward bit where you’re bad at something before you become good at it. Gen Z have grown up in a world where speed is normal, and delay feels like disrespect. That isn’t a criticism, it’s an environment. If you’re raised in instant feedback, you start to believe the world owes you instant outcomes.

Football has swallowed that culture whole.

We even talk like speed is the point. “We need change at the speed of light,” people say, as if human beings can be rebooted like routers. But here’s the thing: even Concord, the most famous symbol of “faster than everyone else,” wasn’t moving at the speed of light. It was rare because it was expensive, loud, complicated, and only a tiny slice of the world could justify it. It crossed the Atlantic in a way no normal plane could, because it was built for a different reality.

That’s modern football in a nutshell.

Only the elite clubs can live like Concord. They can sack a manager, hire another, buy three players for him, sack him again, and keep flying at altitude. The money cushions the mistakes. The global pull covers the bruises. Their impatience is subsidised.

Everyone else? Everyone else is on a standard passenger jet. Seven to eight hours, depending on the tailwind. It takes the time it takes. You can kick the seat and scream at the air hostess, it won’t make the Atlantic smaller.

The tragedy is that mid-table and struggling clubs copy the elite’s impatience, without the elite’s safety net. They try to live at Concord speed with economy-class fuel. And then we act shocked when the engines fail.

A friend of mine said something to me off the record recently that stuck. He called it “the blood culture.” Not accountability, not standards, not ambition. Blood. The baying demand for sacrifice. Fans aren’t just unhappy, they want proof that someone is suffering for it. A sacking becomes a kind of offering to the gods, the idea that if you throw a manager into the fire, the footballing spirits will finally smile again.

But what does that actually buy you?

It buys you noise. It buys you dopamine. It buys you the feeling of control.

It rarely buys you a better team.

Stoicism understood this long before football did. Marcus Aurelius didn’t write about back fours and xG, but he did understand impatience as a form of weakness, because impatience is the refusal to endure the reality you’re in. Not forever, not blindly, but long enough to do the hard work properly. The Stoic idea isn’t “accept misery and do nothing.” It’s accept what is, then act with discipline, without theatrics, without panic.

Football is doing the opposite. It panics first and thinks later.

And that’s why recruitment is the first crime scene.

Clubs keep hiring managers like they’re ordering a takeaway. “He’s available.” “He’s a big name.” “He plays good football.” None of that is a plan. The homework should come first: what does this club actually need, structurally and culturally? What kind of football fits the squad, the academy, the budget, the league position, the owner’s tolerance for risk? What is the manager’s real track record when things go wrong, not just when the wind is behind him?

Then, and only then, once you’ve picked the right fit, you owe that person time. Not blind faith. Time. Respect. A runway long enough to build habits, not just hype.

Managers have their share of blame too. Some stroll into failing clubs and sell a fantasy in the first press conference. “We’ll be fearless.” “We’ll dominate.” “We’ll turn this around quickly.” It sounds brave. It sounds convincing. It’s often nonsense.

If you drop a CEO into a multinational where profits are down, morale is low, and systems are broken, nobody serious expects a miracle by next Tuesday. A serious turnaround works in phases, measured in fiscal cycles. Plan. Execute. Review. Adjust. Repeat. The organisation doesn’t transform because someone “wanted it more” in the first quarter.

Football is the only industry that pretends transformation should happen because the crowd got angry enough.

But football has one terrifying difference: relegation.

That trapdoor changes everything. You fall through it and sometimes you don’t bounce. You lose revenue, you lose players, you lose status, you lose the ability to recruit, you lose time itself because the club becomes a machine for survival. So yes, some knee-jerk reactions happen because fear is real.

Yet here’s the uncomfortable question: if the club goes down anyway, was the sacking actually the smart move? Or was it just the blood culture again? If you genuinely believe the manager is capable of bringing the club back up, if he’s built teams before, if his methodology aligns with what the club wants to become, then why is relegation treated as a moral failure rather than a strategic problem?

Because impatience has turned football into a courtroom instead of a workshop. Every weekend is a verdict.

And the greatest casualty is trust.

Trust is the invisible spine of every successful relationship. In marriage, in friendship, in business, trust isn’t optional, it’s oxygen. So why has football decided trust is a luxury?

The best eras are built on longevity. Longevity is just trust with time added.

Liverpool are the modern example people love to use, and for good reason. Jurgen Klopp didn’t land and immediately produce a masterpiece. He built culture first, then structure, then belief, then trophies. There were moments early on where the ideas didn’t fully gel, where the noise rose, where impatience tried to do what impatience always does: rush the ending. Time didn’t just help Klopp, time was the ingredient.

Everton are a sharper lesson, because it shows how close clubs come to sabotaging themselves. In David Moyes’ early years, there was a season where Everton finished 17th, flirting with the drop and living in that anxious fog where every result feels fatal. The very next season, the same club finished fourth. That is what patience can look like when it’s tied to belief and leadership, not sentimentality. Everton’s story also warns what happens when clubs stop learning that lesson and become addicted to the hire-fire cycle. You don’t get stability, you get permanent transition. You don’t get a “new manager bounce,” you get chronic identity loss.

And then there’s the modern fan’s favourite phrase: “Be careful what you wish for.”

West Ham are the cautionary tale written in capital letters. A manager brings stability, pulls you away from relegation chatter, turns you into a consistent top-eight contender, and then wins you a trophy. Yet the hunger doesn’t calm, it escalates. “Now we want more.” More is not always ambition. Sometimes it’s greed dressed as standards. It’s entitlement wearing a club badge. It’s the belief that satisfaction is weakness.

But football doesn’t reward greed with certainty. It punishes it with chaos.

Tottenham are often mentioned in this conversation for a reason. The club lives under the constant pressure of what it thinks it should be, rather than what it has actually built the foundations to sustain. Fans look up at the skyline and demand penthouse views without accepting you need to lay concrete first. You can’t manifest trophies. You have to manufacture them.

And here’s the dirty secret: impatience feels like ambition, but it behaves like self-harm.

Because what impatience really does is compress human development into an unrealistic timeframe, then label people “failures” when they can’t deliver miracles on demand. In any other job, that would be recognised as a toxic culture. In football, it’s treated as normal. We’ve normalised burning people as part of the entertainment.

The digital age has poured petrol on it. Everything is instant, so everything is judged instantly. The manager isn’t just managing a squad, he’s managing the internet’s mood. His job isn’t just tactics, it’s trend management. A bad substitution becomes a viral trial. A defeat becomes a week-long meme.

And owners aren’t helping, because so many of them are distant from the football itself. There’s a gulf now. PLC thinking. Corporate structures. Middlemen. Layers of “process.” The manager becomes a disposable asset inside an organisational chart instead of a leader with a shared mission. Alignment disappears, and without alignment, trust evaporates. Without trust, patience becomes impossible.

If owners and managers sat down properly, away from the noise, and spoke in depth about the real plan, the real tolerance for setbacks, the real style the club wants to embody, you’d see fewer impulsive sackings. Because you’d see fewer impulsive appointments in the first place.

That’s the heart of it: football’s patience hasn’t died. It’s been murdered by poor planning, digital noise, and a culture addicted to immediate emotional relief.

The fix isn’t to tolerate mediocrity. The fix is to stop confusing impatience with intelligence.

Pick better. Align properly. Communicate honestly. Then commit.

Because the sport doesn’t need Concord fantasies from clubs that can’t afford Concord consequences. Most clubs need the virtue of the ordinary journey, the steady flight, the long build.

Football used to understand that history takes time.

So does a rebuild.

So does a human being.

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