Is there a new Patriot Way? How Jerod Mayo approaches coaching​

by | Sep 20, 2024 | Sports

The first-time head coach differs from Bill Belichick when comes to team culture. Plus, what are Robert Kraft’s expectations for Mayo?

​ The first-time head coach differs from Bill Belichick when comes to team culture. Plus, what are Robert Kraft’s expectations for Mayo? The first-time head coach differs from Bill Belichick when comes to team culture. Plus, what are Robert Kraft’s expectations for Mayo? 

FOXBOROUGH, Mass. — Robert Kraft remembers the day he knew Jerod Mayo would be Bill Belichick’s successor as New England Patriots head coach. Kraft was waiting in a private lounge at Tel Aviv’s Ben Gurion Airport, joined by past and present Patriots players at the end of a six-day trip in June 2019.

Kraft has regularly sponsored spiritual visits to Israel, bringing Pro Football Hall of Famers who have described being baptized in the Jordan River and visiting holy sites in Jerusalem as transformative.

But this trip was different. Dedicated solely to Patriots players from all eras of his ownership tenure, it transformed Kraft’s future vision for the franchise.

There was a delay returning home. The airport lounge was like a locker room. And Mayo was in the middle, surrounded by players from the 1990s such as quarterback Drew Bledsoe and cornerback and Pro Football Hall of Famer Ty Law, players from the early and mid-2000s including running back Kevin Faulk and defensive tackle Vince Wilfork, and players from the 2010s with cornerback Stephon Gilmore and offensive linemen David Andrews and Joe Thuney.

Kraft observed how Mayo, who had been working for the healthcare company Optum since his NFL retirement following the 2015 season, connected with the diverse group.

“What especially got my attention was how he organized some meetings, a dialogue. … It was with veterans and current Patriots. He had been out of the organization, but that showed me a skill of being able to get along,” Kraft said.

“A bell went off, and I said, ‘That’s my next head coach.'”

When the Patriots take the field at the New York Jets on Thursday night (8:15 p.m. ET, Prime Video), Mayo will be on the sideline making his prime-time head-coaching debut. It will be the first time in 25 years Belichick won’t be coaching the Patriots against an AFC East rival.

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It’s the beginning of the new Patriot Way.

The differences in leadership between Belichick and Mayo are striking. Belichick was rigid and intimidating to approach, with relentless attention to detail that included challenging players with pop quizzes about the upcoming opponent. Mayo believes in empowering players and investing in them personally before demanding more on the field.

“It’s about developing people,” Mayo said. “I want those guys to play well each and every snap and win a bunch of games. But I also want them to be resilient when times are tough. That leads to the post-football career.”

The change in culture was intentional. Kraft believes players entering the NFL respond better to a different style of coaching than they did a decade ago. At the same time, he knew that moving away from the old-school Belichick for a first-time head coach was a gamble — especially for a team in the middle of a rebuild.

The early returns have been promising as the Patriots are 1-1, something that wasn’t expected from a team ESPN’s Football Power Index projected would have the least amount of wins this season.

The season-opening victory over the Cincinnati Bengals was the biggest Week 1 upset across the NFL since 2018, according to ESPN Research, with the Patriots entering as a 7.5-point underdog.

It’s a potential sign that Mayo’s way is working.

Outside linebackers coach Drew Wilkins, who is in his first year in New England after spending a decade with the Baltimore Ravens under John Harbaugh and the past two seasons on Brian Daboll’s New York Giants staff, described Mayo as “a great North Star to look up to.”

“The details he coaches with, the enthusiasm he brings to the room, a guy who collaborates and brings positive energy into the building every day, you can’t ask for anything more than that,” Wilkins said.

Jerod Mayo is a Super Bowl champion (2014 season) and former Defensive Rookie of the Year (2008). Fred Kfoury III/Icon Sportswire

MAYO, 38, is younger than Belichick’s decorated 49-year coaching career.

He was Belichick’s first-round draft pick in 2008 out of Tennessee as the 10th selection. Mayo played linebacker for the Patriots from 2008 to 2015 — a seven-time captain who totaled 905 tackles — then coached on Belichick’s staff from 2019 to 2023.

Some teammates called Mayo “Mini Bill” because they believed he saw the game through a coach’s lens. Mayo lived minutes away from the team facility because he spent so much time there — like Belichick. When players wanted to sway Belichick on things like changing the team’s itinerary, they would ask Mayo to speak to him.

To Mayo, those were moments he could prove to his teammates that he had their backs. He points to that relationship-building as a foundational part of his coaching style now.

Such an approach appealed to Kraft, who said at Mayo’s introductory news conference in January: “I think we’ve got someone very special who understands how to manage young people today. The world is different than 20 years ago, even 10 years ago.”

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This is why Law, a former Patriot who became close with Mayo in Israel, believes Kraft made a shrewd choice.

“You have to have someone in tune with that, and he understands these players,” Law said of Mayo. “Think about second- and third-round draft picks; that used to be a huge deal. Now with NIL, some of those guys are taking a pay cut from college, they’re already coming in as millionaires. It’s a different mentality, and [Mayo is] young enough to understand it.”

At one point, Kraft said he became concerned the Patriots might lose Mayo. Then New England’s linebackers coach, Mayo was interviewed by the Denver Broncos, Philadelphia Eagles and Las Vegas Raiders for their head-coaching openings in 2021 and 2022. So, before the 2023 season, Kraft included a succession clause in Mayo’s contract to make him the head coach whenever Belichick’s time in New England ended.

When Belichick left the Patriots in January after a 4-13 campaign, they wasted no time in naming Mayo as his successor. NFL commissioner Roger Goodell later called the succession clause “smart management.”

Almost two months into the job, Mayo ran into Pittsburgh Steelers coach Mike Tomlin at the NFL annual meetings in Orlando, Florida. If anyone could relate to Mayo’s new position of succeeding a legendary coach, it was Tomlin.

Tomlin, who like Mayo is from Hampton, Virginia, was hired by the Steelers in 2007 when he was 34. He succeeded Bill Cowher (15 seasons), who himself succeeded Chuck Noll (23 seasons) — two legends who had delivered a combined five Super Bowl titles.

“He told me, ‘Every day is going to be different,'” Mayo recalled Tomlin saying. “He wasn’t lying. That’s how it’s been so far.”

Mayo won his first career game as a head coach in Week 1 and was greeted with a Gatorade bath. Eric Canha-USA TODAY Sports

SIX DAYS BEFORE the Patriots opened the 2024 regular season at Cincinnati, eight-year veteran defensive tackle Davon Godchaux wanted to interview Mayo for an episode of his podcast. But Godchaux hesitated to ask.

He never would have considered asking Belichick, who often reminded players to stay off social media and keep their focus on football.

“I wasn’t even going to ask [Mayo] at first, but then I was like, ‘Why not?'” Godchaux said. “And he’s so understanding. He said, ‘Of course, anything to support you.’

“It’s a busy time for him, and it was a reach for me to ask. I could say so many things, but he’s supportive and caring.”

Godchaux said he would run into a wall for Mayo and believed his teammates would do the same.

Mayo’s standing as a former player has helped him in the locker room, according to fifth-year safety Kyle Dugger, who has observed a team culture that includes some of Belichick’s core principles complemented with a Mayo twist.

“It’s a lot of similar values as far as the foundation of hard work and all-around doing our job the right way, not getting into the media and listening to the outside noise,” Dugger said. “I think the biggest difference is that the communication has been really open and up-front from him to us — coach to player — and him having the voices to be taken a little more seriously in the locker room.”

“It’s really important for me to feel I have a voice, and he wants to know how things can be run better or how he can help us.”

Dont’a Hightower, the former New England linebacker who played alongside Mayo for four seasons and is now in his first year on the Patriots’ coaching staff, said Mayo has an authenticity and charisma that connects with players.

“What you see is what you get,” Hightower said. “Passion and purpose. He motivates guys to do certain things and step outside their comfort zones. Guys gravitated toward him when he was a player, and they do it now.”

Patriots owner Robert Kraft, left, is encouraged by what he has seen from Mayo so far in 2024. Maddie Meyer/Getty Images

KRAFT FIGURES THERE will be some inevitable growing pains. In addition to 17 outside-the-organization coaches hired by Mayo, the roster includes 10 rookies and 12 other newcomers.

So, Kraft is measured when asked how he will assess the 2024 season for a franchise that was the NFL’s gold standard for nearly two decades, winning six Super Bowls under Belichick.

“I don’t know what’s going to happen. We will probably be in for some rough times. But this is how you build. Our first year with Bill, we went 5-11,” Kraft said. “Jerod exudes a certain confidence and has created an atmosphere of positivity.

“I don’t know what our record is going to be, but … there is a certain connectivity and mutual respect yet pushing back on one another.”

In the fourth quarter of the Week 1 game against the Bengals, as New England attempted to run out the clock, starting quarterback Jacoby Brissett told his teammates to “take them to the hill!” It was a reference to how Mayo ran long, tough training camp practices that finished with players running up a nearby hill multiple times, which had been a Belichick staple. It has become the team motto.

“I was so excited hearing that from the players. It meant a lot,” Mayo said. “We always talk about taking the hard route. That just means all the extra things we do, it pays off.”

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In Week 2, the Patriots lost 23-20 in overtime to the visiting Seattle Seahawks. New England couldn’t hold a three-point lead late in the fourth quarter when it was in control of the game. The Pats had entered as a 3.5-point underdog.

“We talked about it at the beginning of the season — what success looks like for me — and that’s getting better each and every week,” Mayo said. “Not only the players, but also the coaches and myself.”

After the win in Cincinnati, Kraft presented Mayo with a game ball. Kraft hopes it will be the first of many victory celebrations, which the Patriots had grown accustomed to during Belichick’s reign, before things tailed off in recent years.

“I really believe he’s created an atmosphere where the dialogue and communication with the players, they’re going to go out and play for him. I want to see that effort and players putting out,” Kraft said. “The [external] expectations for us are not very high; I want that to tick them off, and look, we want to win games.

“But I think this year … will be great growth and lay the foundation for the future.”

 

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Trending News
Messi launches production company 525 Rosario​​

Messi launches production company 525 Rosario​​

Messi launches production company 525 Rosario​​

Inter Miami star Lionel Messi has launched a production company titled 525 Rosario, dedicated to creating family programming and premium television content.

​Inter Miami star Lionel Messi has launched a production company titled 525 Rosario, dedicated to creating family programming and premium television content. Inter Miami star Lionel Messi has launched a production company titled 525 Rosario, dedicated to creating family programming and premium television content.   

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Messi sets up Suárez for goal in stoppage time (0:50)Lionel Messi sets up Luis Suárez for his team-leading 17th goal in second-half stoppage time. (0:50)

Inter Miami star Lionel Messi has launched a production company titled 525 Rosario, dedicated to creating family programming and premium television content.

The project stands as a joint venture with Smuggler Entertainment, the company that produced the Apple TV+ docuseries “Messi’s World Cup: The Rise of a Legend” and “Messi Meets America.” Together, 525 Rosario is set to produce film, sporting events and branded commercials for athletes worldwide.

“Entertainment has always been a passion for me whether that be on the pitch or in other areas,” Messi said. “I’m really motivated by the opportunity to pursue the project we created with Smuggler Entertainment and to expand it further to create content and experiences on a global scale through this new venture.”

525 Rosario is named after Messi’s hometown in Argentina, a decision meant to reflect the “ultimate symbols of his roots and values of family” according to the company.

“The goal remains to inspire and connect with people around the world in a completely new way, and we are looking forward to this venture,” the Messi family said in a statement. “We would like to continue advancing in the entertainment sector, bringing new initiatives and productions with global reach through innovative storytelling, programming and experiences.”

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The offices will be headquartered in Miami, where Messi currently plays with Inter Miami, and Los Angeles, while being under the supervision of Smuggler Entertainment CEO Tim Pastore and the Messi family.

“This new venture aims to highlight and build upon everything Leo Messi stands for through not only massive premium content on a global scale but also community outreach and family-focused initiatives,” Pastore said.

“We are very grateful to Leo and his family for the opportunity to create and partner on media experiences for local and worldwide audiences while pushing the boundaries of traditional genres.”

525 Rosario also said it would embody the attributes of “innovation and teamwork associated with Leo Messi, all while championing diverse perspectives for both the Latino and Hispanic community, and his global audience at large.”

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Inter Miami star Lionel Messi has launched a production company titled 525 Rosario, dedicated to creating family programming and premium television content.

Simeone: New UCL format meant Atleti ‘had to win’​​

Simeone: New UCL format meant Atleti ‘had to win’​​

Simeone: New UCL format meant Atleti ‘had to win’​​

Diego Simeone said the new Champions League format meant his Atletico Madrid team “absolutely had to win” their opening game, after José María Giménez’s 90th minute header gave them a dramatic 2-1 victory over RB Leipzig.

​Diego Simeone said the new Champions League format meant his Atletico Madrid team “absolutely had to win” their opening game, after José María Giménez’s 90th minute header gave them a dramatic 2-1 victory over RB Leipzig. Diego Simeone said the new Champions League format meant his Atletico Madrid team “absolutely had to win” their opening game, after José María Giménez’s 90th minute header gave them a dramatic 2-1 victory over RB Leipzig.   

Diego Simeone said the new Champions League format meant his Atlético Madrid team “absolutely had to win” their opening game, after José María Giménez‘s 90th minute header gave them a dramatic 2-1 victory over RB Leipzig.

Benjamin Sesko put Leipzig ahead on the counterattack in the 4th minute at the Metropolitano on Thursday, before the game’s MVP Antoine Griezmann levelled after half an hour, and later set up Giménez for his winner.

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Atlético will travel to Benfica in their next Champions League game, before facing Lille, Paris Saint-Germain, Sparta Prague, Slovan Bratislava, Bayer Leverkusen and Salzburg in the rest of the new league phase.

“This format means we absolutely had to win,” Simeone told Movistar. “A draw today wouldn’t do much for us. The format means you have to try to win, and if you can’t, you have to get something.

“Those [teams] who win enough games will be in the top eight, and won’t have to play two extra matches.”

The top eight sides in the league phase will qualify automatically for the Champions League round of 16, while the teams finishing between 9th and 24th will compete in two-legged playoffs to progress.

Simeone’s Atlético invested heavily in this summer’s transfer market, signing Julián Álvarez, Conor Gallagher, Robin Le Normand and Alexander Sorloth, as they look to compete in the Champions League, where they were eliminated in last season’s quarterfinals.

“From 65 to around 80 minutes, it looked like the game might get away from us,” Simeone said. “And then Giménez scored. The performance was good, and if we’d drawn I would have said the same. We had different players trying things, they interpreted the game well, and we got an important, necessary win.”

“We tried until the last minute,” Griezmann said. “We know we have the players to score goals. We’re on the right track, we’ll keep going but it’s just the start.

“MVP? My son will be happy, he loves playing with these trophies, he uses them as goalposts!”

Atlético travel to Rayo Vallecano in LaLiga on Sunday, before visiting Celta Vigo next week, and then hosting Real Madrid in the derby on Sept. 29.

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Diego Simeone said the new Champions League format meant his Atletico Madrid team “absolutely had to win” their opening game, after José María Giménez’s 90th minute header gave them a dramatic 2-1 victory over RB Leipzig.

Source: Ex-Bucks owner nearing NC Courage deal​​

Source: Ex-Bucks owner nearing NC Courage deal​​

Source: Ex-Bucks owner nearing NC Courage deal​​

Former Milwaukee Bucks owner Marc Lasry is close to a deal to buy a controlling stake in the National Women’s Soccer League’s North Carolina Courage, a source confirmed to ESPN.

​Former Milwaukee Bucks owner Marc Lasry is close to a deal to buy a controlling stake in the National Women’s Soccer League’s North Carolina Courage, a source confirmed to ESPN. Former Milwaukee Bucks owner Marc Lasry is close to a deal to buy a controlling stake in the National Women’s Soccer League’s North Carolina Courage, a source confirmed to ESPN.   

Former Milwaukee Bucks owner Marc Lasry is close to a deal to buy a controlling stake in the National Women’s Soccer League’s North Carolina Courage, a source confirmed to ESPN.

Sportico reported that the deal would value the Courage at $108 million.

If the transaction goes through, Lasry would become the principal owner of the Courage, taking over the role from Steve Malik, who bought the franchise rights from the Western New York Flash in January 2017 and relocated the team to Cary, North Carolina.

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Lasry is the chairman of Avenue Capital Group, whose athlete team of advisors includes former NWSL MVP, United States international and World Cup winner Lauren Holiday. Lasry, who sold his stake in the Bucks last year, has been vocal about his desire to invest in women’s sports and previously pursued investing in Angel City FC.

Courage owner Malik and a team spokesperson, could not be reached for comment.

North Carolina is the only franchise in the 14-team NWSL that has not introduced new controlling ownership or a new team governor in the past four years. The league has grown from 10 teams in 2021 and is expected to add two more in 2026.

NWSL team valuations have soared from $3.5 million in early 2020 (Seattle Reign FC) to multiple records this year. The San Diego Wave are in the middle of a two-part sale process valued between $113 million and $120 million, which was a new record in the spring.

Marc Lasry is close to taking control of the National Women’s Soccer League’s North Carolina Courage. Jeenah Moon/Bloomberg via Getty Images

Angel City FC set a record in a deal that closed earlier this month. Willow Bay, dean of the USC Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism, and Disney CEO Bob Iger bought the LA-based club for a valuation of $250 million. (The Walt Disney Company is the majority owner of ESPN.)

The Courage have been highly successful on the field, winning NWSL Championships in 2018 and 2019, the NWSL Shield in 2017, 2018 and 2019 and the NWSL Challenge Cup in 2022 and 2023. The Western New York Flash also won the 2016 NWSL Championship a few months before the franchise’s relocation.

Off the field, however, the Courage have struggled in Cary, which is a suburb of Raleigh, North Carolina.

The Courage averaged about 5,400 fans in 2023, which ranked second to last in the NWSL. The team plays at WakeMed Soccer Park, a 10,000-seat venue that opened in 2002 and is publicly owned.

Malik had led efforts to get a soccer stadium built in the southern part of downtown Raleigh, but those plans have been on pause for years.

Sports development in Raleigh has continued, however, with the NHL’s Carolina Hurricanes announcing last week a $1 billion mixed-use development around their current arena, which sits next to NC State’s football stadium. The arena is only three miles from WakeMed Soccer Park.

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Former Milwaukee Bucks owner Marc Lasry is close to a deal to buy a controlling stake in the National Women’s Soccer League’s North Carolina Courage, a source confirmed to ESPN.

Monaco take down 10-man Barca in Flick’s 1st loss​​

Monaco take down 10-man Barca in Flick’s 1st loss​​

Monaco take down 10-man Barca in Flick’s 1st loss​​

Barcelona made a disappointing start to their Champions League campaign by losing 2-1 to AS Monaco on Thursday after suffering an early blow from defender Eric Garcia’s dismissal.

​Barcelona made a disappointing start to their Champions League campaign by losing 2-1 to AS Monaco on Thursday after suffering an early blow from defender Eric Garcia’s dismissal. Barcelona made a disappointing start to their Champions League campaign by losing 2-1 to AS Monaco on Thursday after suffering an early blow from defender Eric Garcia’s dismissal.   

Barcelona made a disappointing start to their Champions League campaign by losing 2-1 to AS Monaco on Thursday after suffering an early blow from defender Eric Garcia‘s dismissal.

Garcia pulled back Takumi Minamino when the Japan forward intercepted a panicky pass out from Barcelona goalkeeper Marc-André ter Stegen.

The result put an end to a perfect start to the season for Barca, who won their first five LaLiga games under new coach Hansi Flick, but saw Monaco take the lead in the 16th through midfielder Maghnes Akliouche.

Akliouche, who represented France at the Paris Olympics, scored from the right side of the penalty area with national team coach Didier Deschamps watching.

Deschamps was not the only well-known face in the crowd at Stade Louis II. Basketball great Michael Jordan was there, too.

Jordan watched teenage superstar Lamine Yamal equalize for Barca in the 28th with a fine left-footed strike from the edge of the penalty area.

It was his fourth goal of the season but the first of the European Championship-winning Spain forward’s career in the Champions League.

According to UEFA, Yamal became the second-youngest scorer in Champions League history at 17 years and 68 days — just 28 days older than teammate Ansu Fati when he netted against Inter Milan in December 2019.

In July, Yamal became the youngest player ever to score at a Euro when he netted a stunning goal in Spain’s semifinal victory over France.

Fati, meanwhile, recovered from a foot injury to figure in Flick’s squad.

The 21-year-old forward, who returned from a loan to English Premier League club Brighton, had not played for Barca since 2023.

Information from Reuters and The Associated Press was used in this story.

 

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Barcelona made a disappointing start to their Champions League campaign by losing 2-1 to AS Monaco on Thursday after suffering an early blow from defender Eric Garcia’s dismissal.

Flick: Early red changed game ‘totally’ for Barca​​

Flick: Early red changed game ‘totally’ for Barca​​

Flick: Early red changed game ‘totally’ for Barca​​

Barcelona coach Hansi Flick felt Eric García’s early red card was the turning point in Thursday’s 2-1 defeat to Monaco and insisted his side are strong enough to progress in the new-look Champions League.

​Barcelona coach Hansi Flick felt Eric García’s early red card was the turning point in Thursday’s 2-1 defeat to Monaco and insisted his side are strong enough to progress in the new-look Champions League. Barcelona coach Hansi Flick felt Eric García’s early red card was the turning point in Thursday’s 2-1 defeat to Monaco and insisted his side are strong enough to progress in the new-look Champions League.   

Barcelona coach Hansi Flick felt Eric García‘s early red card was the turning point in Thursday’s 2-1 defeat to Monaco and insisted his side are strong enough to progress in the new-look Champions League.

García was dismissed after just 10 minutes for a last-man challenge before goals from Maghnes Akliouche and George Ilenikhena, either side of Lamine Yamal‘s equaliser, earned the Ligue 1 side three points at the Stade Louis II stadium.

The loss was Barça’s first defeat under Flick following an impressive start to the campaign which has so far yielded five successive wins in LaLiga.

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“I think we defended with a lot of passion,” the German coach said in a news conference after the game. “The goal from Lamine brought us back to 1-1. We had chances. At the end, we tried to stay in the game with a compact defence, close together, but you can also see that [Monaco] bring a lot of players in with huge speed. It was not easy to defend.

“After the red card, the game changed totally. The positive things are we tried to defend as a team and attack as a team. We have chances, but they deserve the 2-1 so we have to accept that.

“I am not worried. We have to analyse this, but as I say to the team now, ‘Heads up,’ because they were a little disappointed in the dressing room.”

Barça host Young Boys in their next Champions League game on Oct. 1 and still have to play Bayern Munich, Borussia Dortmund, Benfica and Atalanta, among others, in the competition.

The new format will see the top eight teams in the league phase progress directly to the round-of-16, with the sides finishing between ninth and 24th entering a knockout round and 12 teams being eliminated.

Despite opening with a defeat to Monaco, Flick has no doubts that Barça will qualify for the next phase.

“No,” he responded when asked if Thursday’s loss was further proof that Barça have a problem with the Champions League having failed to reach the knockout rounds in two of the last three years.

Barcelona’s Eric Garcia was sent off in the 10th minute of his team’s loss to Monaco. Getty Images

“You see the situation today. After 10 minutes, the red card. It changed totally our idea, our match plan. We have to accept this. It happens.

“I think we are strong enough to play a good Champions League. We have seven matches and I think we will win many matches and at the end we reach our goals.”

The game changed when García hauled down Takumi Minamino after the former Liverpool forward intercepted a short pass from Barça goalkeeper Marc-André ter Stegen in the early stages of the match. Ter Stegen said the mistake was a misunderstanding between the two and claimed Barça deserved a point.

“Yes, for sure [the red card conditioned the game],” he told reporters. “There was a misunderstanding in that situation. I feel bad for Eric because it has cost him. Then we have to play for 80 minutes a player down.

“It should not have happened, but it does happen from time to time in football. It hurts because even with 10 men we showed up.

“The game was not under control, but we showed up. At the end of the day, we lost by one goal, the second one, which came from nowhere and wasn’t really deserved in that moment.”

Among the positives in defeat for Barça was the return of Ansu Fati, who returned from injury to make his first appearance of the season.

“I saw him in the last weeks of training and when we start the preseason, I saw him really different,” Flick said.

“I spent some time at Brighton last season and I saw him in training and a match and here he is totally different. He’s focused, he brings his quality on the pitch. He needs some time now, but he will get this.”

Fati remains the youngest scorer in the Champions League at 17 years and 40 days old when he netted against Inter Milan in 2019, but he watched from the bench as teammate Yamal became the second youngest to score in the competition at 17 years and 68 days old.

Yamal now has four goals and four assists in six games in all competitions this season, which has seen opposing teams start to double up on him or treat him differently. As a result, Flick removed him early in Monaco to save him for Sunday’s trip to Villarreal in LaLiga.

“Lamine today he tried a lot,” Flick explained. “It was a tough match for him, they [were] attacking him really hard. This is the way. He has to adapt to this. For Pau [Cubarsí] and him, [taking them off] was also to think about Sunday.”

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Barcelona coach Hansi Flick felt Eric García’s early red card was the turning point in Thursday’s 2-1 defeat to Monaco and insisted his side are strong enough to progress in the new-look Champions League.