Newcastle's Fabricio Coloccini fails to stop Ahmed Elmohamady of Sunderland during last season's 1-1 draw at the Stadium of Light.
Newcastle's Fabricio Coloccini fails to stop Ahmed Elmohamady of Sunderland during last season's 1-1 draw at the Stadium of Light.

Sunderland and Newcastle battle for local supremacy



Sunderland is the biggest place in the United Kingdom between Leeds and Edinburgh. Factually correct as it may be - and official statistics depend upon interpretation of where city boundaries lie - it was an unusual piece of information to find on a football club's website, where it was long displayed. Then again, this seemed no random detail.

Slighted by implication were Sunderland's nearest, if not dearest, neighbour. Newcastle may be perceived as the capital of England's north-east, but Sunderland begs to disagree. It can cite a population of 280,000, around 3,000 higher than Newcastle's and a football team which, for the first time in almost three decades, have finished above their rivals in three successive seasons.

A club that still has more league titles - six to four - and was once the country's superpower had long been seen as the area's lesser light, but the pattern is changing.

However, the battle for bragging rights is complicated. Take the simple question of residents.

Tyneside, home to Newcastle, has almost three times as many inhabitants as Sunderland's Wearside. Newcastle possesses a greater catchment area, including neighbouring towns such as Gateshead and North Shields, and, along with a larger ground, higher average attendances (47,720 to 40,011 last season). Sunderland won the north-east's mini league, but Newcastle had the better of the derbies.

Andy Carroll, Shola Ameobi and Kevin Nolan combined to inflict a historic humiliation on Sunderland at St James' Park last October, a 5-1 thrashing their heaviest loss in such contests since 1956. Only Asamoah Gyan's added-time equaliser at the Stadium of Light spared them a second derby defeat.

Local enmities put clubs' identities under the microscope. Both Newcastle's and Sunderland's are evolving rapidly. Long regarded as big spenders, Newcastle can be deemed a selling club after a year in which Carroll, Nolan and Jose Enrique have gone, with less than 20 per cent of the proceeds spent in the transfer market.

The same accusation can be levelled at Sunderland, with Darren Bent and Jordan Henderson both lucrative departures this year but the difference is that they are reinvesting the profits. Steve Bruce has made 10 summer signings, a total unrivalled by any of his peers.

Bruce, a Geordie and a boyhood Newcastle fan, finds himself in an awkward position today after crossing the great divide. The notion of understanding this fixture is crucial as he seeks to make amends for last year's drubbing, which he deems his worst result in football.

To that end, he hopes one of his recruits from Manchester United, John O'Shea, will be fit to join another, Wes Brown, in the defence. "Wes and John will handle the occasion which is something we did not do last year," he said. "It will be a full house and it will be rocking so it is all about handling the atmosphere and the occasion."

That is Alan Pardew's concern, too, with the Newcastle manager worried that Joey Barton's notoriety precedes him. "He'll tell me 'They'll target me today, gaffer.' And I mean that in the nicest possible way, I might add," Pardew said.

Barton contrived to inflame last Saturday's stalemate against Arsenal. A contest with a similarly feisty competitor, in Lee Cattermole, at a hostile Stadium of Light beckons.

In the bigger picture, this might be the start of a season-long scramble for mid-table positions.

"As long as I am the Sunderland manager, the one thing I want to do is finish above them," Bruce said. "I know to some supporters, [winning today] is the be all and end all. 'It doesn't matter where you finish, as long as you beat Newcastle' will be some people's take on it. It certainly isn't mine." But in the 144th Tyne-Wear derby, he may be in a minority holding that view.

3pm, Abu Dhabi Sports 4

Indoor cricket in a nutshell

Indoor Cricket World Cup – Sep 16-20, Insportz, Dubai

16 Indoor cricket matches are 16 overs per side

8 There are eight players per team

There have been nine Indoor Cricket World Cups for men. Australia have won every one.

5 Five runs are deducted from the score when a wickets falls

Batsmen bat in pairs, facing four overs per partnership

Scoring In indoor cricket, runs are scored by way of both physical and bonus runs. Physical runs are scored by both batsmen completing a run from one crease to the other. Bonus runs are scored when the ball hits a net in different zones, but only when at least one physical run is score.

Zones

A Front net, behind the striker and wicketkeeper: 0 runs

B Side nets, between the striker and halfway down the pitch: 1 run

Side nets between halfway and the bowlers end: 2 runs

Back net: 4 runs on the bounce, 6 runs on the full

The low down

Producers: Uniglobe Entertainment & Vision Films

Director: Namrata Singh Gujral

Cast: Rajkummar Rao, Nargis Fakhri, Bo Derek, Candy Clark

Rating: 2/5

In numbers: PKK’s money network in Europe

Germany: PKK collectors typically bring in $18 million in cash a year – amount has trebled since 2010

Revolutionary tax: Investigators say about $2 million a year raised from ‘tax collection’ around Marseille

Extortion: Gunman convicted in 2023 of demanding $10,000 from Kurdish businessman in Stockholm

Drug trade: PKK income claimed by Turkish anti-drugs force in 2024 to be as high as $500 million a year

Denmark: PKK one of two terrorist groups along with Iranian separatists ASMLA to raise “two-digit million amounts”

Contributions: Hundreds of euros expected from typical Kurdish families and thousands from business owners

TV channel: Kurdish Roj TV accounts frozen and went bankrupt after Denmark fined it more than $1 million over PKK links in 2013 

Ain Dubai in numbers

126: The length in metres of the legs supporting the structure

1 football pitch: The length of each permanent spoke is longer than a professional soccer pitch

16 A380 Airbuses: The equivalent weight of the wheel rim.

9,000 tonnes: The amount of steel used to construct the project.

5 tonnes: The weight of each permanent spoke that is holding the wheel rim in place

192: The amount of cable wires used to create the wheel. They measure a distance of 2,4000km in total, the equivalent of the distance between Dubai and Cairo.

NO OTHER LAND

Director: Basel Adra, Yuval Abraham, Rachel Szor, Hamdan Ballal

Stars: Basel Adra, Yuval Abraham

Rating: 3.5/5