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Micah Richards on Erling Haaland, Vincent Kompany, and Specsavers' Best Worst Team

Micah Richards shares insights on Manchester City's title race, Erling Haaland's evolving game, Vincent Kompany's coaching prowess, and his involvement with Specsavers' Best Worst Team initiative.

Micah Richards on Erling Haaland, Vincent Kompany, and Specsavers' Best Worst Team

Micah Richards has backed Manchester City to take the Premier League title race with Arsenal to the wire largely thanks to the efforts of Erling Haaland, while he also claimed to have predicted former team-mate Vincent Kompany becoming a leading manager amid the Belgian's fine work with Bayern Munich. Richards was speaking exclusively to GOAL as part of Specsavers' Best Worst Team campaign.Richards played 245 times for City from 2005 to 2015 after coming through their academy, and he expects his former side to make a strong push to reclaim their Premier League title this season. Arsenal had led by as many as six points, but that gap is now down to only two following a mixed run of results."I think there'll be a title race all the way to the end," Richards told GOAL. "I think Arsenal have been playing out of their skin, five points clear then a few wobbles, and then Man City are only two points behind now, so anything can happen. Man City aren't controlling games like they used to but they're still getting over the line."When you're scoring that many goals, if you look at the Fulham game, they won't be happy with the goals they conceded but [Rayan] Cherki's done really well, [Jeremy] Doku's stepped up this season, [Phil] Foden's back to his best and Haaland's been absolutely phenomenal. To be fair, Nico Gonzalez in midfield playing there on his own at times when Foden and Cherki play higher and Bernardo Silva's having to protect at certain times, he's had a key role in the loss of Rodri, that injury would hurt any team but Gonzalez has done really well."Haaland leads the Premier League Golden Boot charts with 17 goals already this term, with Brentford's Igor Thiago his nearest challenger on 11. The Norwegian has been praised for evolving his game to become more of a team player, and Richards believes the striker is doing more to adapt to some of his new team-mates."I would say his movement is a little bit different," Richards elaborated. "You don't want to give Haaland a chance as he'll score it. I did some analysis on him last season. When the ball was on, say, the right-hand side, he'd always go to the second post all the time. It sort of made it easier for defenders to know what he's going to do. Now, I think his movement in the box...he's a marked man all game. Sometimes two and three around him. People say he doesn't touch the ball, but he hasn't an opportunity to touch the ball because he's got so many players around him."What he's done now, his movement's cleverer in a low block. He's going to the front post then back again, he's going to the back post then back. Even his goal last week [against Crystal Palace], that was a typical, 'OK, I know where the ball's going to come to me', but he's sort of adapting to the players he's playing with as well instead of just staying in one position, thinking 'who's on the ball, what run do I need to make?', that's been different. In terms of goal scoring, he's always going to outscore everyone."Looking for smarter football bets? Get expert previews, data-driven predictions & winning insights with GOAL Tips on Telegram. Join our growing community now!During his peak years at City, Richards was captained by Kompany, with the pair notably winning the 2011-12 Premier League title as part of the same backline. Though the ex-England international has gone into punditry, the Belgian turned his hand to management and is currently head coach of Bayern Munich, with Harry Kane claiming Kompany is the boss who has got the most out of him."Yeah, 100 percent," he answered without hesitation when asked if he foresaw Kompany's transition into a leading manager coming even during their playing days together. "I knew straight away he'd be a coach, we even said that. There might even be an early interview of me, you know when people ask who's going to be a manager, I said [Pablo] Zabaleta and Kompany. Zabaleta is assistant coach for Albania with Sylvinho, and then with Kompany, I just knew because he was a lot smarter than the average footballer. I don't mean that in a bad way, but he was intellectual in terms of the things he wanted to do. He always wanted to look a little bit deeper and being a leader on the pitch came easy to him. That was always one part. Has he got the leadership skills? Yes. Has he got the tactical skills to do it?"He'd also challenge managers over the right thing to do. For example, we had [Manuel] Pellegrini, he used to hold the edge of the box. One time, he said to the defenders, 'we can do that and we don't want to disrespect the manager, but if it's not on, we have to do something different'. So we had an alternate angle of doing things. You could just see he took the responsibility of doing the best for the team when he thought it was right."So when he goes to Burnley and they get 100 points in the Championship, OK yes he got relegated and had a lot to spend, but the reason Bayern Munich wanted him was because he had a style of play and he didn't shy away from that, which a lot of managers when things aren't going right they'd completely change everything. He didn't, he stuck to his principles and it got him the job at Bayern Munich. And yes, he's in a league where he should win, but in terms of the way they're playing and the confidence of the unbeaten run they were on, he's phenomenal. He'll be one of the best coaches in Europe for sure."Add GOAL.com as a preferred source on Google to see more of our reportingRichards is the latest high-profile sports star to partner with Specsavers for their Best Worst Team campaign, following on from the likes of Harry Redknapp, Ella Toone and Luke Littler. As part of the collaboration, Richards became a coach at Sunday League side Warley FC, who lost 18 of 20 matches during 2024-25, conceding 81 goals and winning only once.But in Richards' first game on board, Warley won 1-0 against an opponent they had lost 8-1 to last season. Close friend Gary Neville was also a coach as part of the Best Worst Game initiative, but following his disastrous spell as manager of Valencia, Richards claimed he did not look to his fellow Sky Sports pundit for any guidance whatsoever."I got zero inspiration from Gary Neville!" Richards boomed with his trademark laugh. "When Specsavers ring Big Meeks, I'm ready for the call. I've been trying to tell them for a while now, my eyes are not great, I've needed glasses for years and years and years. When I played, I never wore glasses, ever. So I was waiting for Specsavers to give me the call, and when they said they were partnering up with Warley, I was like, 'it's a match made in heaven'. I couldn't wait."To do that and be sponsoring a team at grassroots level is amazing. All these teams, they've got people behind the scenes who do so much hard work but don't get the recognition. So for Specsavers to come in, give them the budget they need, the awareness they need was brilliant. I absolutely love it."[Sunday League] is massively important. Especially all the guys I know, we all started in Sunday League. It's a level that needs more respect. So many players come from it, so many diamonds, it's got that community feel. Not everyone's going to play in the Premier League, but Sunday League is class. People are working nine-to-five and then getting up to go play on a Sunday. It shows their true passion for the game. I love it."Richards claimed he had little to do with the tactical side of Warley's turnaround, instead focusing on the man-management side of the game and letting manager Luke Armstrong have the final say."I mean, come on, Big Meeks energy! I would like to take all the credit but I can't," Richards said of ending Warley's barren run. "The manager, Luke, he's brilliant. The only thing he was struggling with, or not even struggling but second-guessing, was the formation. He wanted to play 3-4-3 or 3-5-2 and doing that based on the players he had, but all players growing up, certainly at my age, were used to 4-4-2 or 4-3-3. It was a bit easier. When you play three at the back, the wing-backs don't know whether to push on higher or drop a bit deeper. So getting them in positions they're familiar with, you know who your best players are, you know they're going to work hard for the team, and they got the win. And that wasn't down to me, that was more me encouraging them and getting the best out of them. I said before they went out, 'I want to see everyone give 100 percent today', and they got the win."Armstrong claimed that Richards' 'infectious enthusiasm' was key to Warley's change of fortunes, and the ex-defender agrees that this was probably a fair assessment of his impact at the club."Yeah, I think so! You know me, the way I do my punditry with a bit of fun, but giving people belief as well," Richards added. "There's always two sides to a story. So when people say, 'he should be doing this better', I always try to look at the reasons why he's not done it better. I think it's easy to say, 'he should've got there', I look at the details of why it's not happening, is his head in the game or is something going on in his life where you can tell it's playing on his mind."It was more about whatever's happened before, last season was last season and you can't change that now, but this season all you have to do is go out there and enjoy it, give 100 percent. Because they've actually got some very good players as well and it's just about them believing it. A big part of football is confidence and when your confidence is low, it feels like you can't do anything, so I thought giving them confidence and letting them believe they're good players...they went out and got that win! So it's all good."It was more of an 'at last' rather than 'oh my god we're really bad and now we've won'. They'd been in a lot of games that they'd lost, but whether it was little bits of concentration or whatever...the opposition hit the bar in the last ten minutes and previously that might have went in. They needed a little bit of luck but they saw out the game. It was more relief than anything, it was 'we're not as bad as people make out, we're actually good players'. I'm looking forward to what they can do in the future."You can watch Micah Richards' involvement with Warley FC for Specsavers' Best Worst Team campaign here

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Micah Richards on the Premier League Title Race

Micah Richards predicts a tight title race between Manchester City and Arsenal, highlighting the impact of Erling Haaland's stellar performance this season. He praises Haaland's versatility and adaptation to teammates, emphasizing his crucial role in City's attacking strategy.

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Erling Haaland's Game Evolution

Richards delves into Haaland's improved movement and team play, noting the striker's ability to create space and adapt his positioning based on the situation on the field. He praises Haaland's goal-scoring prowess and strategic awareness, making him a formidable force in the Premier League.

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Vincent Kompany: From Player to Coach

Reflecting on his former teammate Vincent Kompany's managerial journey, Richards reveals how he foresaw Kompany's coaching success during their playing days. He lauds Kompany's intelligence, tactical acumen, and leadership qualities, highlighting his impact at Bayern Munich and predicting a bright future for him in European coaching circles.

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Specsavers' Best Worst Team Initiative

Richards shares his experience with Specsavers' Best Worst Team campaign, where he coached Sunday League side Warley FC to a significant turnaround. He expresses admiration for grassroots football and the community spirit it embodies, emphasizing the importance of recognizing and supporting local teams.

Published on Dec 19, 2025