Episodes
-
With Paris Saint-Germain finally ending their cash soaked Qatari quest for a Champions League title John Brewin, Jonathan Wilson and Tariq Panja discuss how its likeable young team’s emphatic trouncing of Inter may have shielded the owners from the sort of scrutiny they should have received. They get it here.
In part two (36:38), discussion turns to the Club World Cup and what FIFA’s game is with a competition that few had been asking for. Is bribing exhausted star clubs with a $125m prize for a month’s work and feeding the transfer-industrial complex really what’s expected from Gianni Infantino and co.? Well, yes.
Produced by: Tom Bassam
Email in at [email protected]
Follow us on X @podcast_libero
Follow us on Bluesky @liberopodcast.bsky.social
Follow us on Instagram @liberopod
Subscribe to our YouTube channel @liberopod
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
-
Brought to you live from the Allianz Arena Munich Football Arena, Miguel Delaney and Rory Smith discuss the fallout from PSG's destruction of Inter Milan in the Champions League final.
Produced by: Tom Bassam
Email in at [email protected]
Follow us on X @podcast_libero
Follow us on Bluesky @liberopodcast.bsky.social
Follow us on Instagram @liberopod
Subscribe to our YouTube channel @liberopod
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
-
Missing episodes?
-
Today on Libero Jack Pitt-Brooke, Rory Smith and James Horncastle look forward to Saturday’s Champions League final between Paris Saint Germain and Inter Milan.
First up is the question of what actually makes for a good Champions League final, whether we ever get what we really want from these games, and whether there being no English team, Real Madrid or Barcelona makes this final a tough sell to English viewers. Does this make us - to borrow a phrase from the internet - ‘Premfaces’?
(25:26) Then James explains Simone Inzaghi’s remarkable tenure at Inter since he replaced Antonio Conte in 2021. Is he one of the best managers in the world right now? And then to Luis Enrique, a brilliant manager with a touching personal story, who has coached some of the most exciting teams in Europe over the last 10 years. Could this be the game that turns him into one of the greats?
Produced by: Tom Bassam
Email in at [email protected]
Follow us on X @podcast_libero
Follow us on Bluesky @liberopodcast.bsky.social
Follow us on Instagram @liberopod
Subscribe to our YouTube channel @liberopod
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
-
As European domestic seasons draw to their close, Jonathan Wilson, John Brewin and Tariq Panja consider how and why a different set of clubs have lifted trophies across Europe. They discuss the collapse of the pay-TV market in France to suggest not all is milk and honey within the global game. Has football finance’s growth in importance turned us all into reluctant accountants? (28:58) And, as the Champions League final in Munich beckons, they share memories of 2012 and Chelsea’s achievement of Roman Abramovich’s dream, and that night’s setting of trends for future trophy celebrations.
Produced by: Tom Bassam
Email in at [email protected]
Follow us on X @podcast_libero
Follow us on Bluesky @liberopodcast.bsky.social
Follow us on Instagram @liberopod
Subscribe to our YouTube channel @liberopod
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
-
Dispatches from Libero's Bilbao Bureau bring word of an all-English European final that was not the greatest advert for the 'Best League in the World™', so instead James Horncastle, John Brewin and Rory Smith discuss the Italian perspective on football in 2025 and how Serie A lost its status as the premier domestic competition. (30:38) We also learn how a restaurant catering to Hull's theatre crowd led Horncastle to a career covering the game in Italy.
Produced by: Tom Bassam
Email in at [email protected]
Follow us on X @podcast_libero
Follow us on Bluesky @liberopodcast.bsky.social
Follow us on Instagram @liberopod
Subscribe to our YouTube channel @liberopod
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
-
Jack Pitt-Brooke, Jonathan Wilson and Miguel Delaney have crossed the Bay of Biscay to see the teams currently 16th and 17th in the Premier League duke it out in the Basque Country with not only Europe's second biggest prize on the line, but also a place in the Champions League. Up front, Libero's intrepid trio of travellers mull over the plotlines for Manchester United, Tottenham Hotspur, and their respective coaches. We also find out the real reason why Jack decided to take the ferry to Bilbao.
In the second half (33:02), talk turns to what such an abjectly anticipated final means for the Europa League and whether the changes to the competition are the result or cause of this less-than-desirable eventuality.
Produced by: Tom Bassam
Email in at [email protected]
Follow us on X @podcast_libero
Follow us on Bluesky @liberopodcast.bsky.social
Follow us on Instagram @liberopod
Subscribe to our YouTube channel @liberopod
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
-
On today’s Libero, Jonathan Wilson, Jack Pitt-Brooke and Miguel Delaney start by looking forward to Saturday’s FA Cup final. Everyone knows that the final is no longer the climax of the English football season, but the big question is why? They look at the rising prominence of the league in the 1980s, the advent of the Premier League in 1992 and Manchester United’s decision to pull out in 2000.
The following Saturday at Wembley is the Championship play-off final between Sunderland and Sheffield United. (32:20) Jonathan talks about his personal connection to this game, and the realities of supporting a team with little chance in the top flight. Jack asks whether this really is such a big game any more, given the struggles of promoted teams to make an impact in the Premier League. Is there any hope beyond just become a yo-yo club, or in Jonathan’s phrase, a ‘mezzanine club’?
Produced by: Tom Bassam
Email in at [email protected]
Follow us on X @podcast_libero
Follow us on Bluesky @liberopodcast.bsky.social
Follow us on Instagram @liberopod
Subscribe to our YouTube channel @liberopod
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
-
On today’s episode of Libero, Rory Smith, John Brewin and James Horncastle wonder whether anyone not named Carlo Ancelotti can make sense of the modern Real Madrid, and assess the prospects for Xabi Alonso at the Bernabeu. In part two (33:36) James also takes great pleasure in decreeing that Ancelotti’s appointment as Brazil manager is proof of the ultimate triumph of Italy in determining the game’s dominant culture.
Produced by: Tom Bassam
Email in at [email protected]
Follow us on X @podcast_libero
Follow us on Bluesky @liberopodcast.bsky.social
Follow us on Instagram @liberopod
Subscribe to our YouTube channel @liberopod
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
-
There was nowhere else to start than San Siro after the Champions League semi-final between Inter and Barcelona. Was it the best of all? Why are semis over two legs usually miles more entertaining than finals? Jonathan Wilson, Miguel Delaney and John Brewin share their memories, and hail gambling man Hansi Flick as football’s greatest ringmaster.
After that (16:55): a missive from Mexico triggers a conversation on the cult of the football hipster. Is that era over? Or did books like Wilson’s 'Inverting the Pyramid' trigger an enduring legacy of earnest investigation into Sparta Rotterdam’s use of Wiel Coerver’s methods and the like? We lounge on Athletic Club cushions to consider the fashion(!), the music and the writing a wider perspective on football has added to modern culture.
Produced by: Tom Bassam
Email in at [email protected]
Follow us on X @podcast_libero
Follow us on Bluesky @liberopodcast.bsky.social
Follow us on Instagram @liberopod
Subscribe to our YouTube channel @liberopod
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
-
With the Europa League final looking likely to be an all-English affair, Jack Pitt-Brook, Rory Smith and Tariq Panja discuss why - given the Premier League's clear financial advantages - Europe's secondary competition has never really been a priority for the clubs of the 'Best League in the World™'.
In part two (42:02), talk turns to Lamine Yamal and whether playing a starring role for Barcelona, or any club in a foreign land, will allow him to reach the levels of fame that his talent deserves. Is it true that Anglophone-centric media struggles to acknowledge talent from overseas?
Produced by: Tom Bassam
Email in at [email protected]
Follow us on X @podcast_libero
Follow us on Bluesky @liberopodcast.bsky.social
Follow us on Instagram @liberopod
Subscribe to our YouTube channel @liberopod
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
-
In the interest of debunking beauty, the first part of the latest episode of Libero starts with Jonathan Wilson, Miguel Delaney and Tariq Panja discussing why Barcelona's thrilling 3-3 draw with Inter Milan should never have happened, largely due to the Catalan club's dire financial circumstances and the problems caused by its presidential model, while also trying to identify what ideal football club ownership looks like.
The second half (38:16) focuses on the role of the modern Europa League, the ideal composition of of the competition's latter stages and the puzzle of finding a satisfactory host city for the final.
Produced by: Tom Bassam
Email in at [email protected]
Follow us on X @podcast_libero
Follow us on Bluesky @liberopodcast.bsky.social
Follow us on Instagram @liberopod
Subscribe to our YouTube channel @liberopod
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
-
Today’s episode starts with a look to the Arctic circle, where Bodø/Glimt have become one of the best stories in European football this decade. The small club from northern Norway have won four of the last five league titles and face Tottenham in the Europa League semi-final this week. So how did they do it, and what can the rest of Europe learn from their success?
Then conversation moves on to Anfield (29:34), where Rory watched Liverpool seal the Premier League title on Sunday. He explains why it meant so much to him, how Liverpool have done it, and whether this is the most successful title of the FSG era.
Produced by: Tom Bassam
Email in at [email protected]
Follow us on X @podcast_libero
Follow us on Bluesky @liberopodcast.bsky.social
Follow us on Instagram @liberopod
Subscribe to our YouTube channel @liberopod
You can read Rory's 2020 feature on Bodø/Glimt via the New York Times' archive here.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
-
On today’s episode, Rory Smith, John Brewin and Jack Pitt-Brooke start off with a look at Paris Saint-Germain, who, for the first time, might well be the best team to watch in Europe. Have they finally moved on from their era of stars? Is a new focus on French talent a sign that they are finally putting football first? Or is it yet another cynical marketing ploy?
Then discussion moves on to another team who play in red and blue: Crystal Palace. They are also from an area that produces plenty of good footballers, many of whom have made it into the Palace team. So is their local authenticity something to protect in the homogenous Premier League of 2025?
Produced by: Tom Bassam
Email in at [email protected]
Follow us on X @podcast_libero
Follow us on Bluesky @liberopodcast.bsky.social
Follow us on Instagram @liberopod
Subscribe to our YouTube channel @liberopod
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
-
What is it about the early 2000s that football finds so fascinating? Why is the game still so captivated by the career paths and podcast empires of the principal characters from an era that is now a generation past? On today’s Libero, Rory Smith, Tariq Panja and Jonathan Wilson try to answer that question, and also work out whether Pep Guardiola has the power to stop time.
Produced by: Tom Bassam
Email in at [email protected]
Follow us on X @podcast_libero
Follow us on Bluesky @liberopodcast.bsky.social
Follow us on Instagram @liberopod
Subscribe to our YouTube channel @liberopod
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
-
On Libero today, Jack Pitt-Brooke, Jonathan Wilson, John Brewin and Miguel Delaney consider the Tottenham Hotspur odyssey as Ange Postecoglou faces down his near-certain fate. Can any Spurs manager succeed under the current ownership structure? Has the “Glory Game” been sacrificed for the security of a profitable business?
And later in the show, the gang consider English football’s north-south divide: how come the Premier League’s upwardly mobile middle class are from Greater London and the Home Counties rather than Yorkshire and Lancashire? Is it really just about airports?
Produced by: Tom Bassam
Email in at [email protected]
Follow us on X @podcast_libero
Follow us on Bluesky @liberopodcast.bsky.social
Follow us on Instagram @liberopod
Subscribe to our YouTube channel @liberopod
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
-
On Libero today, Jack Pitt-Brooke, Rory Smith, John Brewin and Tariq Panja ask whatever happened to the lost generation of footballers born in the second half of the 1990s? They should be at their peak now, dominating the global game. And yet it feels as if football belonged to Cristiano Ronaldo and Lionel Messi for so long that they will ultimately be replaced by the Gen Z players, born in the 21st century.
Later on the show they discuss the 'cult of the pundit' in English football, whereby Jamie Carragher and Gary Neville are now far more famous than they ever were as players, setting the news agenda with their every word. How have they managed to become so big?
Email in at [email protected]
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
-
On Libero today, Jonathan Wilson, James Horncastle, Miguel Delaney and Tariq Panja discuss the new Champions League format. Is it better than what came before? Were there really more surprises? And what tweaks would they like to see.
Then they discuss whether a football club can have a DNA — something that for better or worse, often intangible, that makes the club what it is, and explains why Sunderland will not win the playoffs.
Email us at: [email protected]
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
-
On Libero today, Jack Pitt-Brooke, James Horncastle, John Brewin and Jonathan Wilson discuss whether or not the 2024-25 season has been good or not. What do we mean when we talk about a good season? How do we find the right balance between quality, competitiveness and drama? Then they discuss why football journalists can never get as angry about referees and PGMOL as fans do, and hear why the cult of the celebrity referee actually started in Italy.
Email us at: [email protected]
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
-
On Libero today, Jonathan Liew, Miguel Delaney, Rory Smith and Jonathan Wilson discuss whether elite football is trying to do away with fans, whether it is OK that Chelsea sold their own women's team to themselves, and discover that Jonathan Wilson knows who Angry Ginge is.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
-
Libero 4 with Jack Pitt-Brooke, James Horncastle, Jonathan Wilson and John Brewin covers Trent's 'defection', some reflections on classic transfer market shenanigans and the FA Cup - has Wembley really lost it's mythological status?
Trent AA (02:30) FA Cup (35:30)
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
- Show more