Sports
Ray Winstone on England, the Hand of God and West Ham: ‘I’d have chopped Maradona’s arm off’
In case you don’t know, the film Scum is a brutal, harrowing portrait of violence inside Britain’s borstal system for young offenders, unflinching in its depiction of rape, racism, abuse, suicide, and the corrosive effects of power. Banned from television when it was first made, it remains one of the most shocking British films ever produced.
It also launched Ray Winstone’s career.
Which is why revisiting it ahead of this football interview feels important but unusual.
Then again, this is not a normal football interview.
Two weeks before the World Cup, Winstone strolls into The Athletic’s London headquarters early and raring to go, ready to talk about the World Cup, England, and his beloved West Ham United for our special interview series, Why I Love The Beautiful Game.
“Let’s get this started, son. I’m looking forward to it,” he says with that familiar East End growl.
Why I Love the Beautiful Game With Ray Winstone
Lee Clayton and Lauren Morales-Jones
Winstone is an authentic, lifelong football fan, not a Johnny-come-lately, joining the queue of fashionable Hollywood A-listers who have recently become attached to the game.
Though he admires what Ryan Reynolds and Rob Mac have achieved at Wrexham during their Disney-documented rise through the leagues to the Championship, he has some disappointing news for West Ham supporters hoping for a similar celebrity-led rescue mission.
“Football ain’t what it was like when we were kids. We all want to moan. Look at my club (West Ham United), but we’ve got to understand: People who own football clubs, especially in the Premier League, buy football clubs because it’s a business.”
“It’s their business, which gives them the right to do what they want to do,” says Winstone, who was speaking 10 days before allegations emerged about West Ham’s co-owner David Sullivan. “They don’t care about me or you, or the fans. Forget about that. Football, sometimes, is the last thing on their mind. It’s a business! Whatever their business is.
“You look at some clubs, big clubs, I don’t want to name them because I will probably get nicked, but they were taken over when they were in the black and now, because of the way they are being run and the way the money is being used from that club, they are in the red.
“You sit back and wonder why these people get involved in the big clubs in the Premier League. Some of them are very successful.
“For me, I go to watch my team; I couldn’t afford to (buy West Ham), but I go to watch my team play for the enjoyment of watching the game. I have no wish to be involved with the people who run those clubs, not for me.
“As far as the others (in the movie business), it depends on what they are doing it for.
“What the guys at Wrexham are doing is quite fantastic. Great for Wrexham, great for the town and I guess it’s very good for football, good luck to them.”
Not everything he sees is good for football, though.
This World Cup across the United States, Canada and Mexico is causing him grief.
“It doesn’t feel to me like it’s the World Cup I have always known. It’s become so political. I don’t want to get into that because I am not interested, but it’s become about something else rather than football.
“And the price of it! To go and watch a football match is… when I was a kid, it was for us. For the want of a better word, the working men, for all the working men to be able to afford to watch the biggest stars. Now, the prices to go and watch the World Cup and the European Cup (Champions League) and a Premier League game… It’s not the game we knew.
“I love watching it but it kinda leaves a bad taste in my mouth sometimes. You have to question the competition right away. It’s like the European Cup, now there is this league stage. There was a vote a few years back, do we want a Super League in Europe? No was the answer. But they got it anyway.
“The World Cup is a great spectacle, but it’s just so big now. I will (still) love watching it, I’m an Englishman and I will be supporting England and will love every moment of watching it and I will forget all this stuff I am saying now, because we are football fans, but it’s just that side of things…
“I listen to UEFA and FIFA and I listen to them talk like they are their own political country somewhere, like there is one rule for them and one rule for us. The way it’s gone (the commercialisation), it’s gone to an extreme that really leaves a bad taste in the mouth. If you talk to most football fans they will agree.”
Ask Winstone for the player who best embodies the history of the World Cup and his answer is immediate: Sir Geoff Hurst (who scored a hat-trick for England when they won the 1966 World Cup final against West Germany).
“God I loved watching Pele and I love Messi, he’s beautiful to watch, but the Hand of God?” he says of Diego Maradona, who scored the most controversial World Cup goal of all time against England on this day (June 22) 40 years ago. “I can’t get the words out to explain. He upset me so much, I’d have chopped off his arm and put it in a museum.
Diego Maradona’s ‘Hand of God’ goal at the 1986 World Cup (Allsport/Getty Images)
“But Geoff was… Course, I am biased, well, three goals in a World Cup final. Says it all.
“I want to be inspired by a fellow countryman. That’s where I am from and if anyone inspires you, they’ve got to come where you’re from because they’re the people who show you’ve got a chance in life.”
Ray Winstone: “I’d have chopped Maradona’s hand off and put it in a museum”
Lee Clayton and Lauren Morales-Jones
In preparation for our meeting, I’ve been revisiting Winstone’s films, some of the finest work from a career spanning more than 50 years. Scum. Sexy Beast. The Departed. Nil by Mouth. More recently, there have been strong reviews for his fabulous performances as drug baron Bobby Glass in Netflix’s The Gentlemen.
He’s worked with iconic film legends, including Martin Scorsese, Steven Spielberg and Guy Ritchie and appeared with Anthony Hopkins, Robin Wright, Angelina Jolie, Leonardo DiCaprio, Matt Damon, Jack Nicholson to name but a few.
On screen, Winstone has spent much of his career playing men to be feared. Across our time together, he is polite, nostalgic and utterly in his element.
Soon enough, the conversation turns to his football highlights; East London, and the rituals that define matchday. For Winstone, no trip to watch his beloved West Ham is complete without pie and mash, ideally accompanied by jellied eels.
The dish might require some explanation for an international audience. Pie and mash is East London’s ultimate comfort food: a minced beef pie, mashed potatoes, and a parsley sauce called liquor. It is the kind of working-class staple that fuelled generations of dockers, market traders, and football supporters. For Londoners, it is more than a meal — it is a taste of the city’s history.
Pie, mash and liquor at M.Manze’s in Southwark, London (Dukas/Universal Images Group via Getty Images)
Winstone could be its poster boy.
“I’ve got to have pie and mash when I am watching West Ham,” he says. “It’s like going back home, because I don’t live in the area anymore.
“Now when I have friends from up north coming down to a game and I introduce them to pie and mash, they can’t have it. Just like when I can’t eat tripe when going up north.
“But, for me, West Ham and pie and mash go hand in hand.
“They tried to take the idea to the U.S., tried to take it global. I think Rod Stewart had something to do with it. They shipped it over and opened a shop in LA as there were a lot of Londoners over there. I don’t know if it’s still going. I never had any there. I get mine from a little guy in Waltham Abbey now and it’s very, very good.”
Winstone, pie and mash and West Ham are never far apart.
“My greatest ever West Ham player was Bobby Moore. He epitomises everything about the club, being brought up in an area more famous for gangsters and then you see a man wipe his hands before he shakes hands (to collect the World Cup) with the Queen, representing a place where I come from, was something very, very special. I’d have to say, Bob.”
Moore shakes the hand of Queen Elizabeth II before the World Cup final in 1966 (PA Images via Getty Images)
When England won the World Cup, Moore, who was the captain, and both goalscorers, Geoff Hurst and Martin Peters, played for West Ham.
He corrects me.
“Excuse me, who won the World Cup in 1966?”
“England?”
“Sorry?”
“West Ham won the World Cup.”
“Thank you.”
He continues: “I was brought up in Plaistow. It was 1964, I was seven years of age, when I first went. The club won the FA Cup in 1964, the European Cup Winners’ Cup in 1965. I remember standing at the bottom of my road, seeing the coach — we did not even have a double-decker bus. I remember seeing these people singing I’m Forever Blowing Bubbles and that was it for me.
“It’s not just about the team, the club. It’s when I am away from home and, it used to be a newspaper but now a tablet is the fashionable thing to do, and you look for the score — win, lose or draw — and the name West Ham takes you back to where you have come from.
“We always said that we won the Cup in ‘64, the European trophy in ‘65, and the World Cup in ‘66. I went to the first game at Wembley (England v Uruguay), and we drew 0-0. I bought the World Cup Willie pendant, which I still have at home. Going to the games with my dad, they are the memories of a lifetime.”
Jimmy Greaves dribbles with the ball against Uruguay in 1966 (Allsport/Getty Images)
He felt connected to both club and country from that golden age of trophies.
“I loved the 1970 England strip, the all-white kit; nothing fancy, it was just the three lions with a badge, white shirts, white socks. That’s England. That’s a beautiful kit.
“It was the same with West Ham. The claret and blue shirts… always claret sleeves. I’m not in love with this shirt without claret sleeves. Let’s have the shirt as it should be.
“That’s what it was in those days, it was about your manor, your place where you were born and raised. That’s what the team meant to you. Just turns out my team gives me a lot of pain.”
This season, the club was relegated from the Premier League amid much acrimony, falling into the second tier for the first time in 14 years. There is an expected fire sale of talent to come, while supporters are angry at poor recruitment and bad management from the board of directors. There may be more pain before gain, according to Winstone.
“Yeah, West Ham fans are suffering at the moment. That’s why we are West Ham fans. As far back as I can recall, that’s the way it’s been.
Dejected West Ham fans react to their relegation from the Premier League (Charlotte Wilson/Offside/Offside via Getty Images)
“I look back on a player like Billy Bonds and that team when it felt like they all had beards and long hair, looked like a bunch of pirates. It was as if someone had kicked the ball up in the air like a rugby match and they came running at you. It wasn’t that, but it seemed like that. It was so exciting to watch. We weren’t the best team in the world but, yeah the best beards. I love a beard.
“My favourite player for a night out? Frank McAvennie. Got me in a bit of trouble, but I loved him.
“Among my other favourite players we had Paolo Di Canio, who was a genius. Dimitri Payet was a top player. I look at a (modern) player like Jarrod Bowen and see the kid giving 120 per cent every time he plays, like he was born and bred in the area. Love him to death.
“But this season we weren’t good enough. Too many mistakes. We’ve got the players and our man Nuno (Espirito Santo) who has come in, made mistakes, but he has done an amazing job. From where we were, to where we ended up, we were a much better side, but we were still relegated.
“To the fans, they know a lot more about it than I do. They’re upset, they’re not happy about how the club is run, and I can understand that and I get that and I agree with them. Something has got to change over there.
“We were promised when we moved from our beloved Upton Park to the big stadium and I’ve got to be honest, I supported that move. If we are going into the 21st century and we want to compete, like we had been promised, we needed a bigger stadium.
West Ham moved to London’s Olympic stadium in the summer of 2016 (Ryan Pierse/Getty Images)
“How I remember it — and I might be wrong here — we were told we were going to own the stadium, change the stadium so it came in around the pitch (remove the running track) and we were going to build on that and it hasn’t happened.
“Now I don’t know how you sell a club like that. It doesn’t own the property. So what is the worth of West Ham?
‘It’s the name because we don’t own f*** all else. It’s the name, West Ham United, it’s not the property, so where has it gone? We don’t have a home and that’s worrying. So what they need to do is to sell it, give it away, give it to someone who will buy a stadium. Someone who is going to own a stadium.
“And we’ve got to sell players, but let’s find some kids, maybe find a spine of East London players, local boys, East End blood in them. It might take us two or three years to build back up. I don’t think we will bounce straight back up (into the Premier League). Maybe this is where we need to be.”
Hopefully, there is more joy to come from watching England this summer.
“Watching England is a bit like watching West Ham. We’ve had a bit of pain, haven’t we?
“The Hand of God goal, the haunting World Cup penalty shootout defeats, it shows it takes a lot of luck to win a World Cup.
Terry Venables consoles Gareth Southgate after his miss in the penalty shootout defeat by Germany at Euro 96 (Richard Sellers/Sportsphoto/Allstar via Getty Images)
“My message is that we have to believe. England are as good as any team in this World Cup.
“You don’t have to be the best team to win the World Cup, you have to come right at the right time and have a lot of luck.
“We’ve got Harry Kane, He’s got a bit of Alan Shearer and a bit of Teddy Sheringham in him, but he’s got to stay fit. Without him, we’d be in a bit of trouble. He’s a class act.
“Don’t come good too early, but you’ve got to get it right and you’ve got to get through the group.”
And then there is the conundrum of who takes the No 10 role.
“Jude Bellingham is a class act, but with Morgan Rogers in there, we look more of a team. Bellingham tries to do everything, and he’s good at it, but it kind of throws us out of shape. When you see Rogers in there, he knows his job and he does his job so well. We are a much more balanced side.
“Balance is so important. When I think back to 1966, you can remember Bobby Charlton gliding with the ball, and we’ve already talked about Bobby Moore and Geoff Hurst, Roger Hunt up front too, but Alan Ball and the graft he put in was so important. You need a player who will do that (make sacrifices for his team-mates) if you are going to win a World Cup. I was a kid then, I didn’t know, but looking back Ball was magic.”
Argentina and Germany, Portugal and Spain are mentioned as contenders. More, surprisingly, Winstone — who clearly knows his football — tips Norway as dark horses to go deep into the competition.
“They’ve got some centre-forward, haven’t they (Erling Haaland), and play in an old-fashioned English way,” he concludes. “I’d have them as an outsider.”
Erling Haaland has been in ominous form at the start of the World Cup (Mark Smith/ISI Photos/ISI Photos via Getty Images)
Japan are my outsider and they won at Wembley. “Nah, England were messing about then, let’s take nothing out of that,” I am advised, forcefully. “I’m sure when it comes to it…”
And we are finished.
“That alright, son?” he asks at the end. “I only swore once. I enjoyed it. Turns out I had a lot to get off my chest.
“Good luck with it.”
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Sports
Newcastle United mailbag: Do you have a question for Chris Waugh?
June used to be a desert at Newcastle United, yet for three successive years they have dominated the Premier League news agenda in that month. Unfortunately, for the most part, that has been in a negative sense.
The Victor Munoz near-miss and Liverpool swooping in to seemingly steal a key transfer target stung badly and, with Sandro Tonali’s agent trying to negotiate an exit, a first XI which has already lost Anthony Gordon looks set to be weakened further.
But what has been the reaction internally to losing the race for Munoz, given Newcastle appeared to be leading it? Are any incoming transfers actually close? What is the strategy this summer and will it actually bring about a strengthening of the team and the squad?
Off the field, why have announcements still yet to be made regarding the training ground and stadium? And how are Newcastle going to go about replacing Steve Nickson, their outgoing head of recruitment?
Our Newcastle United writer Chris Waugh is on hand to answer a selection of your questions in a subscriber mailbag. Submit your queries below and some of them will be addressed in an article later this week.
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Sports
Trade your top pitchers, trust in Jac Caglianone and more fantasy baseball takeaways
Every good pitcher is a must-sell.
Honestly, you should probably stop reading right now and make a series of trade offers involving your best pitchers because they are all sell-high candidates.
When we originally recommended Zero SP in the spring, we embraced it as a lifestyle, not merely a draft strategy. It’s the correct way to approach a full season’s worth of transactions. You should keep Zero SP in your heart every day of the year.
In practice, this means it’s time to pivot away from several of your best fantasy baseball decisions. Sorry, but this was always the path.
The guiding principle underpinning Zero SP is the belief that no starting pitcher is safe at any point in the season (or preseason, or offseason). It’s not as if all the risk is concentrated in the early-round starters, either. We’ve entered an era in which workloads are historically light for pitchers, yet these guys routinely account for 60-65% of total days lost to the injured list.
Fortunately, we can minimize the potential for catastrophic draft outcomes by ignoring the position until the middle and late rounds, plus we can do so without sacrificing quality. The fantasy baseball industrial complex is pretty terrible at identifying all the useful starters in advance of any season, which is a gift to the Zero SP community. This year, our mid-draft targets have actually been the most valuable starting pitchers in the game.
And, it’s now time to flip those guys for upper-tier hitters, wherever possible, if you have unaddressed batting needs. Your league will definitely offer cash-out options on the Cy Young frontrunners.
I would prefer not to use the names of the most glaring sell-high candidates here, because I’m not trying to wish ill on anyone. Also, I do not want to be accused of hexing these players. Let’s just say that if you didn’t immediately toss [REDACTED] on the trade block following his 15-K shutout — or [REDACTED] following last week’s six-inning, 13-K gem — then you were never fully committed to the Zero SP ethos.
Joshua Báez is banging down the door
The St. Louis Cardinals have a collection of outfielders on the major-league roster who are delivering individual seasons ranging from adequate (Nathan Church) to small-sample good (Lars Nootbaar, Nelson Velazquez) to supernova (Jordan Walker), so it’s possible Báez will continue to stew at Triple-A Memphis. We may not see him in the big leagues until an injury clears a path.
Let the record show, however, that Báez has produced a half-season of the highest quality. His profile is uncommonly fantasy-friendly, too. He’s on the short list of prospects who need to be stashed in competitive leagues ahead of his eventual call up.
Báez produced a four-homer game last week, which landed him on the radar even for low-info fantasy managers.
A FOUR-HOMER GAME FOR JOSHUA BÁEZ! 🤯
The @Cardinals’ No. 3 prospect becomes just the third Minor Leaguer this decade to deliver a quartet of roundtrippers: pic.twitter.com/3cRsqt88Is
— MLB Pipeline (@MLBPipeline) June 17, 2026
Báez has launched 25 homers this season and swiped a dozen bags. Last year, he went 20/54 across two minor-league levels. Entering Sunday, the 22-year-old was slashing .344/.375/.797 in the month of June. He was a breakout player in the spring and simply has not stopped hitting. Whenever he arrives, he’ll be a must-watch player and priority fantasy pickup — a potential difference-maker across four categories.
Kade Anderson remains cartoonishly dominant
Anderson’s situation is a bit like the Báez story, in that there isn’t an obvious need for him on the big-league roster at this stage. Seattle is the one team in MLB that seems to have more pitching than can be accommodated in the traditional manner. As a result, Anderson is stuck at Double-A Arkansas, where he is toying with opposing batters:
Kade Anderson had everything working tonight. Final line: 6IP, 2H, 0R, 1BB, 8K, 12 whiffs, 70 pitches, 50 strikes.
Anderson’s scoreless streak up to 27.2 innings.
Anderson in 12 starts:
1.02ERA, 61.2IP, 32H, 8BB, 90K. pic.twitter.com/09njE3mzX8— Mariners Minors (@MiLBMariners) June 20, 2026
He’s allowed only 11 hits and zero runs (earned or unearned) over his last five starts. Anderson has struck out 90 batters and issued just eight walks over 61.2 innings. His fantasy ratios are a near-perfect match for Eric Gagne’s best season (1.02 ERA, 0.65 WHIP). He’s given up only two homers and seven extra-base hits this year while holding batters to a .152 average.
Anderson is as ready as any pitching prospect can be, but, again, the Mariners are weirdly overstocked with starters. The most dominant left-handed pitcher currently in the minors might remain in a holding pattern until Seattle’s bullpen needs a boost.
Jac Caglianone, finally feasting
Caglianone was an obvious buy-low target two weeks ago, because he was literally hitting baseballs harder than anyone, though with only modest surface-level results. Over his last dozen games, he’s gone deep five times and produced an OPS north of 1.000, so the fantasy numbers have begun to sync with the batted-ball data. Cags has casual, carefree power:
Kade Anderson had everything working tonight. Final line: 6IP, 2H, 0R, 1BB, 8K, 12 whiffs, 70 pitches, 50 strikes.
Anderson’s scoreless streak up to 27.2 innings.
Anderson in 12 starts:
1.02ERA, 61.2IP, 32H, 8BB, 90K. pic.twitter.com/09njE3mzX8— Mariners Minors (@MiLBMariners) June 20, 2026
As a result of his sluggish start, Caglianone remains unattached in roughly 30% of leagues at the major platforms, so a few of you can probably still scoop him up. It wouldn’t be much of a surprise if he delivered 20-25 additional bombs over the balance of the season.
Last call on T.J. Rumfield
Colorado’s rookie first baseman has been binging in June, stringing together multi-hit games and nudging his season OPS up to .835. He now has 11 home runs among his 27 extra-base hits, yet he remains curiously under-rostered on most platforms. His team will be home at Coors Field for 10 of their next 13 games, so today would be an excellent time to take a flier on any of several surging Rockies.
Another week, another two-start streamer minefield
If you’re shopping for a sketchy starter to make you feel truly alive, you have scrolled your way to the right place, friend. Let’s get to work:
- Casey Mize, Tigers (vs. NYY, vs. HOU) – Honestly, Mize isn’t sketchy by the standards of this feature. He’s about as good as it gets among lightly rostered starters. When he’s healthy, he’s very good. He enters the week with a 1.01 WHIP, striking out a batter per inning. You aren’t likely to find a better option on the wire.
- Grant Holmes, Braves (at SD, at SF) – A two-start week against two of the three lowest-scoring teams in the National League, you say? I’m in. Holmes can absolutely make a mess of this setup, but, hey, process over results and whatnot.
- Peter Lambert, Astros (at TOR, at DET) – He’s curiously available across all platforms, considering his quality K-rate (22.1%) and perfectly acceptable fantasy ratios (3.23, 1.11). This feels like an 11-K week with at least one win. Lambert is fully approved for use in any format.
- Eduardo Rodriguez, Diamondbacks (at STL, at TB) – There’s more than a dash of luck involved in Rodriguez’s season to this point (2.45 ERA, 4.93 xERA), and his strikeout potential is only modest. Adding him might reasonably be considered a cry for help. You probably shouldn’t do it. Alas, streaming can lead us down some dark and dangerous roads.
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Sports
World Cup 2026: Germany defender Nico Schlotterbeck to miss rest of tournament with ankle injury
Schlotterbeck had played the entirety of Germany’s opening game at the 2026 World Cup – a 7-1 win against Curacao – scoring their second goal.
“Schlotti will be greatly missed on the pitch as an outstanding defender, especially his excellent build-up play,” said Germany manager Julian Nagelsmann.
“It could have been his World Cup. Yesterday, we all tried to lift his spirits – fortunately, he is a very positive character who is already looking ahead again.
“It is a very positive sign that he will initially remain here within the team, because he also has an influence off the pitch.”
Germany’s remaining centre-back options are Jonathan Tah, Rudiger, Waldemar Anton and Newcastle’s Malick Thiaw.
Schlotterbeck had been linked with a move away from Borussia Dortmund but signed a contract extension, external with them until 2031 in April.
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