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[h=1]Roberto Mancini frustrated by Manchester City's reduced spending[/h] Manager says the club must sign players such as Sergio Agüero and Samir Nasri to mount a title challenge




  • WORLD-FOOTBALL-CHALLENGE--007.jpg
    Roberto Mancini has been frustrated by Manchester City's wish to rein in spending. Photograph: Graham Whitby Boot/Sportsphoto/Sportsphoto Ltd./Allstar

    Marina Del Rey, Los Angeles. Roberto Mancini, in shorts and trainers, looks even more tanned than usual, the product of several weeks back home in Sardinia. The sun is shining here in California, too, and Mancini is already talking about wanting to return next year.
    And yet it is clear there is something troubling him. This, in essence, is supposed to be the season when all that spending of Abu Dhabi's oil riches was meant to leave Manchester City in a genuine position to challenge for the prizes they covet the most. The remit was always to win the Premier League but it is a little shake of the head, a blowing of the cheeks, when Mancini is asked whether this is the point in the process when City can be considered potential champions in the making. "At the moment we are not ready to play for the title."
    He qualifies this by pointing out that he may think differently in the coming weeks – if, that is, the club are able to lure Sergio Agüero from Atlético Madrid and find a way of persuading Arsène Wenger to part with Samir Nasri.
    For now, though, this is a slightly downbeat Mancini, pensive even. Manchester United have already spent £50m this summer, after winning the league by nine points last season. City, in contrast, have adopted a new line of conservatism that is not entirely to the liking of their demanding manager.
    "It's been difficult," he says. "United and Chelsea don't need to buy six players. They need only two or three and they are OK. But for us, it's different."
    He wanted five, possibly six, new players, but has come to realise that will now not happen. "We have signed [Gaël] Clichy and [Stefan] Savic but we have also lost players as well, like Jérôme [Boateng], like [Patrick] Vieira."
    The frustration is clear. "When you start pre-season you need the players [in place] because now is the only time you can work well with the players for three or four weeks." He made this point at the end of last season to the chief executive, Garry Cook, and the football administrator, Brian Marwood. The timescale has not been met and Mancini feels he "can be disappointed about this".
    Could more have been done behind the scenes? "Always. For a team like us, it's important to move quickly, to move [for players] before the end of the season. If you move before, then you have no problem in June and July. You have the players for pre-season. If you don't, then you lose 20 or 30 days with them."
    The backdrop to this is that, by his own admission, Mancini's relationship with Cook has been troubled at times over the past few months. This is the only time he has addressed the matter and his take on it is that "maybe we had a different way ... I think this way, and Garry another way, but this is normal when you work with other people. We have all the same targets – we want to win. All of us want to win."
    He says there is a "good relationship" now but it is here, for the first time, that he also admits he wants more control within the club, over transfers, over the medical side, over player contracts and other issues.
    Sir Alex Ferguson, after all, once said that a manager should have more control than anyone else at a football club. "I agree with him," Mancini says. "He has been at United for a long time so, for him, it is easy. Maybe, for me, it's difficult because I have been here only 18 months or so. But maybe I need to have more control of the other situations. It [the club] can improve that way. Maybe if I win the Premier League this season it will be different."
    These could easily be construed as the early shots of a power struggle – or, at least, one that is potentially in the making. "It's very important," Mancini continues. "It's important for the manager to have control, over the players, the medical staff, the other situations. If the manager loses it's the manager who is sacked, so I think the manager needs to take every decision. If he makes a mistake, he pays for it."
    They are comments that are unlikely to go down brilliantly at the Etihad Stadium, or in Abu Dhabi, where the club's chairman, Khaldoon al-Mubarak, is acutely aware of the occasional tensions between Mancini and Cook but has the attitude that all these matters should be kept behind closed curtains.
    Mubarak summoned Mancini to Abu Dhabi at the end of last season to explain, alongside Cook, why the manager would not be given the financial backing of previous transfer windows. Mancini was irritated in the extreme and there was a feeling at the top of the club that the Italian was not fully taking into account the Uefa financial fair-play rules – though he says that is not true. "I know them very well. If these rules are in football we need to respect them."
    What is clear is that the regulations have affected City more than any other club in Europe. In previous windows City would have happily paid over the odds for their main targets but when it came to Alexis Sánchez, newly of Barcelona, the new, more cautious City chose to pull out. "It was difficult [missing out on him]," Mancini says. "But the market is difficult. There were two or three other teams after him. We couldn't do it."
    Agüero has now replaced Sanchez as Mancini's primary target. "He can score a lot of goals for us. Agüero, for me, will become a top striker. He is 23, he can play as a first striker or a second striker. He has good technique. He could play with Carlos [Tevez], or [Edin] Dzeko, or [Mario] Balotelli." Mancini is nodding to the sound of his own words. "I really think that now is his time."
    He also thinks Dzeko and Balotelli will be better equipped for their second seasons in English football. "Dzeko improved a lot in the last two months of last season and Mario was the same. They will be OK. After a year in the Premier League they will have improved a lot. They are good players."
    There will, however, be no reprieve for Craig Bellamy and it is here that Mancini demonstrates that, behind the smile, this is a man who budges for nobody. "We already have three strikers," he says. "I think it will be difficult to have a player who can play only once a month. I don't like this."
    And Tevez? Where will he be when Swansea City arrive on 15 August? "Carlos is still a City player at the moment. He should fly back to Manchester at the start of August, before the Community Shield. He is still an important player for us."
    It is difficult, however, for Mancini to be certain, especially as the Argentinian does not even return his manager's telephone calls.
    Will Tevez play for City again? "Yes." But surely, after everything that has been said and done, not as club captain? Mancini smiles knowingly, as if he takes the point. But this time he says nothing.

 
[h=1]Barcelona officials fly in but Arsenal firm on Cesc Fábregas valuation[/h] • Midfielder fails to join rest of squad for games in Germany
• Barça also seek to clinch sale of Oriol Romeu to Chelsea




  • Sid Lowe in Madrid
  • guardian.co.uk, Friday 22 July 2011 21.36 BST Article history
    Cesc-F-bregas-Arsenal-Bar-007.jpg
    Cesc Fábregas has made his intention to leave Arsenal clear to Arsène Wenger but Barcelona's increased bid, believed to be £33m, is still some way off the London club's £40m valuation. Photograph: Adrian Dennis/AFP/Getty Images

    Barcelona looked to nudge their pursuit of Cesc Fábregas closer to a conclusion on Friday when the club's vice-president Josep María Bartomeu and director for football Raul Sanllehi travelled to London to renew negotiations for the midfielder, who did not join the Arsenal squad on a flight to Cologne.
    But an increased bid understood to be around £33m is unlikely to get a positive response from the Emirates, with frustration growing as the season draws nearer and Barcelona still refuse to offer a figure more in line with Arsenal's £40m valuation. Arsène Wenger insisted there had been "no movement" .
    With their main priority Alexis Sánchez finally tied up, Barcelona have turned their attention to Fábregas. Communication between the clubs has been reasonably fluid and although significant differences remain between the bids and Arsenal's expectations, Barcelona hoped their presence would convince Arsenal and Fábregas of their good intentions and willingness to negotiate further. Arsenal directors cannot understand why Barcelona have not made a more realistic bid, however.
    Wenger is keen to achieve a swift resolution and would resist any bid late in the transfer window but he remains steadfast in his refusal to sell Fábregas at a fee significantly below £40m.
    Bartomeu and Sanllehi also met representatives of Chelsea as they sought to close a £5m deal that would take the 19-year-old Barcelona midfielder Oriol Romeu to Stamford Bridge.
    Barcelona continue to cling to their hope that Fábregas's desire to depart will force the issue and the midfielder is continuing to bring pressure to bear having made his intentions clear to Wenger. His absence from the trip to Germany has been officially attributed to an injury, just as his absence from pre-season games in Malaysia and China was.
    Fábregas has so far not handed in a formal transfer request or spoken out in stronger terms. For his part, Wenger believes that his player's departure was always dependent on an acceptable bid and although Barcelona are creeping towards that, they remain some way off. Fábregas's position is one of increasing isolation as he awaits a Barcelona move that persuades Arsenal that it is worth selling him.
    Barcelona's failure to reach Arsenal's valuation is explained by the economic difficulties they face. In simple terms Barcelona do not have the funds to launch a huge bid for Fábregas. They secured Sánchez for £25m plus £11m in variables, having previously announced their summer budget was £45m in total. Bojan Krkic has joined Roma for £12m as Barcelona try to scrape together the funds to end a saga of which many have grown weary.
 
[h=1]Manchester United's Rio Ferdinand warns his less-vaunted team-mates[/h] • Jonny Evans, Chris Smalling and Phil Jones challenged
• Defender will not step aside for the new generation




  • Press Association
  • guardian.co.uk, Friday 22 July 2011 17.40 BST Article history
    Manchester-United-Rio-Fer-007.jpg
    Rio Ferdinand leaves the field with Wayne Rooney after the match against the Seattle Sounders. Photograph: Steve Dykes/Getty Images

    Rio Ferdinand has warned challengers for his Manchester United place that any player awestruck by the former England captain's standing at the club will be "shipped out".
    The 32-year-old Londoner is in no mood to surrender his place in the team, but he says young challengers for his central-defensive position must not be fazed by reputation alone. "They can't be in awe of me," he said. "If they are, they will get shipped out. That is the way it is. Your desire has to be to play. I understand and respect that. That is why they are here."
    This week, Ferdinand spoke enthusiastically about the abilities of Jonny Evans, Chris Smalling and the £17m new signing from Blackburn, Phil Jones.
    But stepping aside to let them into the first team is a different proposition completely, in Ferdinand's view. "I remember what I was like when I was young," he said. "I remember looking up at Slaven Bilic, Marc Rieper, Alvin Martin and Steve Potts at West Ham. I was only a kid but I used to sit on the bench and think I should be playing. I am sure these guys think the same thing. If they have got anything about them, they should.
    "They are all talented footballers and, I believe, Manchester United players. At some point I am sure they will take over the reins. But I am competitive and I don't want to be giving up my position to anybody. My task is to prove I am hungrier than them."
    Having arrived on United's US tour late due to their participation in the European Under-21 Championship with England, Smalling and Jones are now expected to make their first appearances in Saturday night's encounter with the Chicago Fire at Soldier Field.
    Sir Alex Ferguson has already made the point to Jones that Ferdinand has missed matches through injury during the previous three seasons, heightening the new man's chance of getting games.
    Ferdinand has to live with that knowledge, knowing any problem will be seized upon with suspicion and worry, even when he only gets a tap on the ankle, as was the case in the final seconds of Wednesday's 7-0 rout of the Seattle Sounders.
    though he claims there are no fitness concerns blighting his pre-season campaign. "My fitness is OK," he said. "I am nowhere near where I want to be yet, but we have three weeks left.
    "Last season, I had no problems with my back, which was a good thing, but I did pull my calf which kept me out for a chunk of the year.
    "Hopefully this time around I won't have anything like that and I can continue to play a consistent amount of games."
    The new goalkeeper David de Gea is also set for his first United appearance, with many fans anxious to see whether the 20-year-old can match the heady expectations that have brought comparisons with Chelsea's Petr Cech from Ferguson himself.
    The retirement of Edwin van der Sar has brought an obvious pressure to perform, whilst Anders Lindegaard and Ben Amos clearly have a vested interest in trying to make life as difficult as possible for De Gea.
    Not that Ferdinand believes that should be an issue.
    As he comes up to his 10th season at Old Trafford, he knows handling pressure is merely an extension of the job his team-mates have to perform.
    "Over the years this club has been very successful," he said.
    "In the last couple of years we have won trophies as well. It is great to see. But it does bring pressure.
    "It is not overwhelming though. It is part of being a Manchester United player. You have to deal with all that stuff. It separates you from being a Manchester United player and not."

 
[h=1]Harry Redknapp: Even £35m won't tempt Tottenham to sell Luka Modric[/h] • 'If we wanted to sell, that wouldn't be enough,' says manager
• Chelsea prepared to raise the bar with third bid




  • David Hytner
  • guardian.co.uk, Friday 22 July 2011 15.37 BST Article history
    Luka-Modric-Tottenham-Orl-007.jpg
    Luka Modric, left, is still hopeful of a move to Chelsea despite Tottenham's insistence that he stays. Photograph: Frennie Shivambu/AFP/Getty Images

    The Tottenham manager, Harry Redknapp, has told Chelsea that a bid of £35m for Luka Modric would be rejected out of hand, as he maintained the club's uncompromising stance on the midfielder.
    Modric is determined to complete the transfer across London, so that he can continue to play in the Champions League. He has handed in a transfer request, having also fallen out with the Spurs chairman, Daniel Levy.
    Chelsea have so far had bids of £22m and £27m rejected, with the feeling at Tottenham being that the offers bordered on the insulting for a player of Modric's quality. Chelsea are prepared to raise the bar again and go beyond £30m but Redknapp has pre-empted a bid of around £35m, which has been advanced in some quarters as a potential compromise, to suggest that Tottenham would want much more.
    "If we were looking to sell him, it [£35m] wouldn't meet my valuation," Redknapp said. "I think he is worth an awful lot more money than that. Really, we're not looking to sell Luka. We need to keep our best players, so he is a player that we want to keep if possible.
    "It is in the hands of the chairman of the football club. It's not my decision at the end of the day. I obviously want to keep him as the coach but the chairman says he is not for sale, so we'll have to wait and see. We're quite determined, if we can, to hang on to him but it is a difficult situation. It's a difficult one for Luka and it's a difficult one for Tottenham."
    Chelsea believe that as they have Modric's will, they will be able to close the deal before the end of August and that it is worthwhile to plug away. Levy is renowned for driving the hardest of bargains but to him every player has his price.
    Chelsea have lost Michael Essien to a long-term knee injury and the new manager, André Villas-Boas, is keen to inject creativity into his midfield. Modric has said that Chelsea "are a club that all players dream of joining".



































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<h1>Manchester United's Rio Ferdinand warns his less-vaunted team-mates</h1>

<p id="stand-first" class="stand-first-alone">&#8226; Jonny Evans, Chris Smalling and Phil Jones challenged<br>&#8226; Defender will not step aside for the new generation</p>


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<time datetime="2011-07-22T17:40BST" pubdate="">Friday 22 July 2011 17.40 BST
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<li class="history"><a class="rollover history-link" id="history-link-byline" href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/football/2011/jul/22/rio-ferdinand-manchester-united-chicago#history-link-box">Article history</a></li></li><div id="article-wrapper" data-global-auto-refresh-switch="on">

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<img src="http://static.guim.co.uk/sys-images/Football/Pix/pictures/2011/7/22/1311351497445/Manchester-United-Rio-Fer-007.jpg" alt="Manchester United Rio Ferdinand" height="276" width="460">
<div class="caption">Rio Ferdinand leaves the field with Wayne
Rooney after the match against the Seattle Sounders. Photograph: Steve
Dykes/Getty Images</div>
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<p><a href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/football/rio-ferdinand" title="More from guardian.co.uk on Rio Ferdinand">Rio Ferdinand</a> has warned challengers for his <a href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/football/manchester-united" title="More from guardian.co.uk on Manchester United">Manchester United</a> place that any player awestruck by the former England captain's standing at the club will be "shipped out".</p><p>The
32-year-old Londoner is in no mood to surrender his place in the team,
but he says young challengers for his central-defensive position must
not be fazed by reputation alone. "They can't be in awe of me," he said.
"If they are, they will get shipped out. That is the way it is. Your
desire has to be to play. I understand and respect that. That is why
they are here."</p><p>This week, Ferdinand spoke enthusiastically about
the abilities of Jonny Evans, Chris Smalling and the £17m new signing
from Blackburn, Phil Jones.</p><p>But stepping aside to let them into
the first team is a different proposition completely, in Ferdinand's
view. "I remember what I was like when I was young," he said. "I
remember looking up at Slaven Bilic, Marc Rieper, Alvin Martin and Steve
Potts at West Ham. I was only a kid but I used to sit on the bench and
think I should be playing. I am sure these guys think the same thing. If
they have got anything about them, they should.</p><p>"They are all
talented footballers and, I believe, Manchester United players. At some
point I am sure they will take over the reins. But I am competitive and I
don't want to be giving up my position to anybody. My task is to prove I
am hungrier than them."</p><p>Having arrived on United's US tour late
due to their participation in the European Under-21 Championship with
England, Smalling and Jones are now expected to make their first
appearances in Saturday night's encounter with the Chicago Fire at
Soldier Field.</p><p>Sir Alex Ferguson has already made the point to
Jones that Ferdinand has missed matches through injury during the
previous three seasons, heightening the new man's chance of getting
games.</p><p>Ferdinand has to live with that knowledge, knowing any
problem will be seized upon with suspicion and worry, even when he only
gets a tap on the ankle, as was the case in the final seconds of
Wednesday's 7-0 rout of the Seattle Sounders.</p><p>though he claims
there are no fitness concerns blighting his pre-season campaign. "My
fitness is OK," he said. "I am nowhere near where I want to be yet, but
we have three weeks left.</p><p>"Last season, I had no problems with my
back, which was a good thing, but I did pull my calf which kept me out
for a chunk of the year.</p><p>"Hopefully this time around I won't have anything like that and I can continue to play a consistent amount of games."</p><p>The
new goalkeeper David de Gea is also set for his first United
appearance, with many fans anxious to see whether the 20-year-old can
match the heady expectations that have brought comparisons with
Chelsea's Petr Cech from Ferguson himself.</p><p>The retirement of Edwin
van der Sar has brought an obvious pressure to perform, whilst Anders
Lindegaard and Ben Amos clearly have a vested interest in trying to make
life as difficult as possible for De Gea.</p><p>Not that Ferdinand believes that should be an issue.</p><p>As
he comes up to his 10th season at Old Trafford, he knows handling
pressure is merely an extension of the job his team-mates have to
perform.</p><p>"Over the years this club has been very successful," he said.</p><p>"In the last couple of years we have won trophies as well. It is great to see. But it does bring pressure.</p><p>"It
is not overwhelming though. It is part of being a Manchester United
player. You have to deal with all that stuff. It separates you from
being a Manchester United player and not." </p></div></div></ul>
 
[h=1]Harry Redknapp: Even £35m won't tempt Tottenham to sell Luka Modric[/h] &#8226; 'If we wanted to sell, that wouldn't be enough,' says manager
&#8226; Chelsea prepared to raise the bar with third bid




  • David Hytner
  • guardian.co.uk, Friday 22 July 2011 15.37 BST Article history
    Luka-Modric-Tottenham-Orl-007.jpg
    Luka Modric, left, is still hopeful of a move to Chelsea despite Tottenham's insistence that he stays. Photograph: Frennie Shivambu/AFP/Getty Images

    The Tottenham manager, Harry Redknapp, has told Chelsea that a bid of £35m for Luka Modric would be rejected out of hand, as he maintained the club's uncompromising stance on the midfielder.
    Modric is determined to complete the transfer across London, so that he can continue to play in the Champions League. He has handed in a transfer request, having also fallen out with the Spurs chairman, Daniel Levy.
    Chelsea have so far had bids of £22m and £27m rejected, with the feeling at Tottenham being that the offers bordered on the insulting for a player of Modric's quality. Chelsea are prepared to raise the bar again and go beyond £30m but Redknapp has pre-empted a bid of around £35m, which has been advanced in some quarters as a potential compromise, to suggest that Tottenham would want much more.
    "If we were looking to sell him, it [£35m] wouldn't meet my valuation," Redknapp said. "I think he is worth an awful lot more money than that. Really, we're not looking to sell Luka. We need to keep our best players, so he is a player that we want to keep if possible.
    "It is in the hands of the chairman of the football club. It's not my decision at the end of the day. I obviously want to keep him as the coach but the chairman says he is not for sale, so we'll have to wait and see. We're quite determined, if we can, to hang on to him but it is a difficult situation. It's a difficult one for Luka and it's a difficult one for Tottenham."
    Chelsea believe that as they have Modric's will, they will be able to close the deal before the end of August and that it is worthwhile to plug away. Levy is renowned for driving the hardest of bargains but to him every player has his price.
    Chelsea have lost Michael Essien to a long-term knee injury and the new manager, André Villas-Boas, is keen to inject creativity into his midfield. Modric has said that Chelsea "are a club that all players dream of joining".
 
[h=1]Revealed: How Spurs can help Barca get Fabregas[/h] Published 23:00 22/07/11 By John Cross

http://www.mirrorfootball.co.uk/tra...-Roma-fund-improved-offer-article774425.html#
Arsenal-Stoke-City-Cesc-Fabregas-Premier-League+cropped


Barcelona are planning to sell a number of players to Premier League clubs to help fund a new, improved bid for Cesc Fabregas.
The Spanish giants want to get the deal done before they go on a pre-season tour of the US - and it is believed coach Pep Guardiola has promised Fabregas he will be their next signing.
Arsenal have been told to expect a fresh bid this weekend, with Barca insiders confident of having an answer by Monday.
However, major cash-flow problems mean the Nou Camp side are trying to raise £20million to fund the Fabregas signing by offloading some of their finest younger players on "buy-back" deals.


They are close to selling Spain Under-20 midfielder Oriol Romeu to Chelsea in a deal that gives them the option to bring him "home" again in two years' time and are also considering selling £4m-rated winger Ibrahim Affelay to Tottenham after they made an approach.
Barcelona are also setting up an £11m deal to sell forward Bojan Krkic to Roma, with the option to buy him back in two years' time for a fixed price of £12m.
It all goes to show how desperate Barcelona are.
Additionally, although the European champions have signed Udinese's Chilean winger Alexis Sanchez, they could not meet the Italians' asking price and eventually compromised on paying £23m, possibly rising to £33m based on appearances and success in the future.
They have also struggled to come up with extra cash for Fabregas, with Arsenal holding out for £40m and refusing to entertain suggestions of accepting the fee in instalments.
Romeu, a holding midfielder, has agreed to join Chelsea for around £3m but Barcelona insisted on a clause allowing them to buy him back in June 2013.
New Chelsea manager Andre Villas-Boas tried to sign the 19-year-old when in charge at former club Porto. He sees him as an outstanding prospect who can offer back-up, especially with Michael Essien likely to miss much of the season after knee surgery.
Barcelona only signed Affelay in January, but he is surplus to requirements after the arrival of Sanchez and Tottenham are one of several clubs interested in signing him.
They may just allow him to go in a straight-cash deal, and for more than the £3m Barca paid to get him from PSV Eindhoven - they got him so cheap because he had just six months left on his contract.
Fabregas missed Arsenal's Far East tour and will not be involved in today's friendly in Cologne either.
Arsenal are keen to get a deal done quickly so they can look to sign replacements.
One potential deal could be Villarreal midfielder Santi Cazorla, but he is also interesting a Malaga side with increased spending power thanks to a new big-money backer.
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[h=1]Nani inspired by battle for first-team places at Manchester United[/h] &#8226; Portuguese winger set to be challenged by Ashley Young
&#8226; 'If you have competition, you will train harder and push yourself'




  • Press Association
  • guardian.co.uk, Sunday 24 July 2011 15.00 BST Article history
    Nani-insists-he-will-figh-005.jpg
    Nani insists he will fight for his place in the Manchester United first team next season. Photograph: Matthew Peters/Man Utd via Getty Images

    The Manchester United winger Nani has claimed he will be inspired by the intense battle for first-team spots at Old Trafford this season.
    The arrival of Ashley Young from Aston Villa has provided immediate competition for the winger, who with Antonio Valencia sidelined for most of the previous campaign, was the only orthodox wide-man at Sir Alex Ferguson's disposal.
    Danny Welbeck has operated on the flanks and is now available after a successful loan spell at Sunderland, whilst Mame Biram Diouf was picked there for the first half of the 3-1 win over Chicago Fire on Saturday.
    However, Nani, who scored the visitors' final goal at Soldier Field, is adamant he does not intend to take a backwards step.
    "The competition is good," he said. "It inspires you. If you have competition, you will train harder and push yourself in every game. At Manchester United, you have to be ready every time you go on the field."
    The 24-year-old contributed nine goals and 18 assists &#8211; the highest in the Premier League &#8211; to help United to a record 19th title last season. Yet it still was not enough to earn him a starting spot for the Champions League final defeat to Barcelona in May.
    It must have come as a blow to a player who started the campaign so well, but tailed off just as Valencia was recovering from the broken ankle he sustained in September.
    In the aftermath of that loss, and with Ferguson looking at how best to strengthen a team that was so badly outplayed at Wembley, there were plenty happy to write off Nani's United career completely. But he returned for the five-match tour of the United States, and appears in the right frame of mind to provide an even greater contribution.
    "Of course I can get better," he said. "That is what I am trying to do. It is not easy but it is what I look to achieve every year. If I can get more goals and more assists, that will be good for the team and help us in all the competitions we are going for."
    Nani believes team improvement will be required too. For, while United proved good enough to finish top of the table last season, with Manchester City trying to get stronger and Liverpool expected to challenge along with Arsenal and last year's runners-up Chelsea, he is anticipating an even fiercer battle for supremacy.
    "In every season it is important to start well," he said. "But it is even more the case now because this season will be much harder than the last couple. All the teams are getting stronger and trying to be much better. We have to match that."
    Although the first-half showing on Saturday was the least convincing of United's tour performances so far, Ferguson was reasonably satisfied. The goalkeeper David de Gea and the former Blackburn defender Phil Jones made solid debuts.
    Ferguson retracted an initial thought that De Gea was responsible for Chicago Fire's early opener and by the time he has bulked up, which United's medical staff insist will happen over time, he should be a positive influence.
    The same is already true of the Mexico striker Javier Hernández, who is expected to join United on the next leg of their journey, to New York, where they will face an MLS all-stars side containing David Beckham and Thierry Henry at Red Bull Arena on Wednesday.
    "It was tough for him last season but over time, Javier will mature and get better," said Ferguson. "He is improving technically and now he has had a good season behind him in a tough division.
    "We are setting targets for him. We thought he would get 20 last season and he did. He might do even better this time."
    United complete their tour in Washington DC next Saturday when they face Barcelona in a rematch of that one-sided European final.
    With Lionel Messi of Barcelona missing, it hardly represents an opportunity for revenge.
    It will be a guide though, with Nani convinced United have what it takes to win in Munich next year, when the European Cup will be up for grabs again.
    "We have to be ready for the challenge," he said. "Barcelona play fantastic football and are the best team in the world at present. But we have the conditions to be better in the future."

 
[h=1]Chelsea's 'valued squad' deserve respect, says André Villas-Boas[/h] &#8226; Manager content to let Manchester United splash the cash
&#8226; Villas-Boas to make 'wise' transfer decisions not hasty ones




  • Dominic Fifield
  • guardian.co.uk, Saturday 23 July 2011 18.00 BST Article history
    Didier-Drogba-Chelsea-007.jpg
    Chelsea's Didier Drogba, left, and Branislav Ivanovic, centre, have a splashing time after heavy rain during training in Bangkok. Photograph: Damir Sagolj/Reuters

    André Villas-Boas has defended Chelsea's patient approach in the transfer market this summer and insisted his squad are more than capable of regaining the Premier League title, despite their relative toils last season.
    Chelsea's spending under Villas-Boas has been restricted to deals for the teenage goalkeeper Thibault Courtois from Genk and the Barcelona B midfielder Oriol Romeu. While talks remain on-going with Anderlecht over the signing of Romelu Lukaku, who could cost up to £15m, the pursuit of Luka Modric and Scott Parker has dragged. Other Premier League challengers have strengthened early and significantly.
    Manchester United, who last season finished nine points clear of Chelsea, then managed by Carlo Ancelotti, have spent £50m on new recruits, though Villas-Boas is convinced his squad can bridge that gap. "Each club is responsible for the money they put into the market," the manager said. "We put a lot of money in in January [when David Luiz and Fernando Torres were signed]. You have to value, as well, the kind of approach we are taking this summer.
    "It's an approach made on taking wise decisions, evaluating what we have, paying respect to the valued squad we have. It's not a case of spending straight away when we don't need to do that. We hope it will prove to be the successful approach. Clubs have to spend what they have to spend. United have decided to sign players after losing some to retirement and they've reinforced those sectors. We will decide what sectors we need to reinforce in our own team."
    There is a belief within the hierarchy at Chelsea that the nine-point gap conceded to United last season was deceptive and there is hope that Villas-Boas, arguably a more hands-on manager than his predecessor, will be able to get more from the squad at his disposal. Even so, the addition of a playmaker of Modric's quality has been pinpointed as a priority, particularly given the need to supply Torres more effectively.
    Villas-Boas, whose team play a Thailand All Star XI in Bangkok on Sunday, admitted in the past few days that a failure to win trophies would be "the end of the world", but dismissed suggestions that Chelsea are already playing an onerous game of squad catch-up with the champions.
    "You have to recall that Chelsea went to United with a great chance to shorten a distance that, OK, in the end, became nine points," he said, referring to the trip to Old Trafford in May when, had the visitors prevailed, they would have drawn level on points at the top of the table. "It went United's way, but it could have gone Chelsea's way and changed the Premier League in the last couple of days.
    "Rather, recall that Chelsea came back with an extremely good recovery in terms of shortening that points distance. This club had an opportunity to win the title and that shows how competitive we can be."
    Chelsea hope to conclude Romeu's £4.5m arrival from Barcelona B over the next 24 hours, with Courtois also to conclude his arrival and immediate loan to Atlético Madrid.
    "The Spanish league is an extremely competitive league and a great place for him to be," Villas-Boas said. "With Oriol, the club have agreed terms with Barcelona and now it is about personal terms and a medical.
    "That sector, central midfield, was an area where we were struggling for numbers. He's [Oriol] one of the most promising players in that No6 position and has a bright future."


 
Pre-season friendly Hull City give Kenny Dalglish a headache after beating Liverpool &#8226; Anfield club lose 3-0 &#8226; £20m Jordan Henderson fails to impress Share reddit this Paul Doyle at the KC Stadium guardian.co.uk, Saturday 23 July 2011 18.23 BST Article history Kenny Dalglish Liverpool manager Kenny Dalglish watches as his side lose 3-0 to Hull City in a pre-season friendly. Photograph: Paul Currie/Action Images To suggest that Liverpool supporters are not sure about Kenny Dalglish may seem similar to declaring that David Attenborough is not altogether certain animals are very interesting &#8211; but the fact is, Dalglish has plenty to prove this season. Nothing, of course, will ever detract from the glory and dignity that he brought to the club during his time as a player and his first reign as manager, but this is a club whose fans crave assurances that success is ahead rather than gone by and, although the Scot has spent lavishly since his second coming, not everyone is convinced that he has spent wisely. This 3-0 defeat by Hull will not provoke panic, but nor can it have soothed any worries. "The lads are at various degrees of fitness for the matches," Dalglish said. "Someone like Jordan [Henderson] has only trained for a week, so it's a bit too much to ask him to start the game. "[But] if they're going to stake a claim for a first-team place, they've got to earn it. We've given them every opportunity to get themselves fit and try and earn the right to play in the first team, but they'll need to do better than that if they want it." Many of the 20,000-plus crowd at the KC Stadium came in search of clues as to how Dalglish may use the wealth of options he has given himself after expenditure of more than £100m since his return to Anfield, but the side Liverpool fielded for the first half read more like a list of the players the club might like to sell rather than ones who will be entrusted with trying to end the long wait for the English title. Alas, the likes of Christian Poulsen, Alberto Aquilani and Joe Cole did nothing to change opinions of them, whether that be to attract buyers or convince doubters they have a long-term future at Liverpool. Even the one new player that was cast into action from the start, goalkeeper Alexander Doni, is unlikely to become a regular starter - the Brazilian was bought as back-up for Pepe Reina and did nothing here to suggest he deserves to be parachuted into the team ahead of the Spaniard. That said, neither of the first two goals he conceded were his fault.. Robbie Brady's shot was deflected and the second goal, from Robert Koren, was struck into the net from distance after a fine move through a static Liverpool midfield. The second half brought 11 changes and, perhaps, a line-up slightly closer to the one that Liverpool will begin the new season with at Sunderland in three weeks' time. Charlie Adam, Jordan Henderson and Stewart Downing all appeared and gave insights into how Dalglish may plan to use them. Adam mostly operated from a deep-lying central midfield position in a 4-2-3-1, seeking to orchestrate play in much the same manner as Xabi Alonso once did before he was controversially let go to Real Madrid by Rafael Benítez. Adam's passing was as ambitious and accurate as it had been for Blackpool last season, and he showed the dynamism that some accuse him of lacking, often romping forward in a bid to get on the end of moves that he initiated. It is easy to see him playing alongside Lucas Leiva next season, especially if Raul Meireles leaves. Downing also demonstrated interesting potential. After his half-time arrival, he mostly hugged the touchlines, first the left and then the right, offering Liverpool the width they had lacked in the first half and, most importantly, for much of last season: only one team completed fewer crosses than Liverpool in last season's Premier League and the purchase of Downing, who had a better cross-completion rate than any other player in the league last season except for Everton's Leighton Baines, seems designed to address this. The acquisition of Henderson, for £20m from Sunderland, is the one that has generated the most head scratching. He spent most of the 45 minutes that he played against Hull in a central attacking position just behind Andy Carroll, lending credence to suggestions that he was bought as a successor to Gerrard, who is now 31. Although he ran about earnestly, Henderson struggled to make any impact, seldom touching the ball until he dropped deeper. Gerrard's starting place does not look under immediate threat.
 
Sport Football Arsenal Gervinho has an instant impact for Arsenal with brace in Cologne win &#8226; Ivory Coast international scores twice in first 15 minutes &#8226; Forward replaced early on after minor injury scare Share reddit this Press Association guardian.co.uk, Saturday 23 July 2011 22.22 BST Article history Gervinho Arsenal's Gervinho celebrates scoring the opening goal after just seven minutes in Cologne. Photograph: Tony O'Brien/Action Images Gervinho scored twice in his first 15 minutes as an Arsenal player as the Gunners beat Cologne 2-1 in a pre-season friendly in Germany on Saturday. The Ivory Coast international, signed from the French champions Lille by Arsène Wenger earlier this month, made an impressive start by opening the scoring just seven minutes into the game with the Bundesliga side when he finished well after being sent clear on goal by a pass from Jack Wilshere. Eight minutes later Gervinho made it 2-0, this time benefitting from good work on the right flank by Theo Walcott. But Arsenal's new arrival did not get the chance to add to his double strike, as he was substituted just before the half-hour mark with what seemed to be a minor knock after colliding with the Cologne substitute goalkeeper, Miro Varvodic. Arsenal's other new signing, Carl Jenkinson, had a far less memorable night when the teenage defender scored a spectacular own goal just before half-time, but the Gunners held on fairly comfortably in the second half and their evening was only soured by a serious-looking knee injury suffered by the 19-year-old midfielder Conor Henderson.
 

[h=2]Interview[/h] [h=1]Tony Adams is still relishing his Azerbaijan adventure[/h] The former Arsenal defender says he is loving life in the Gabala dugout as he builds a new football dream




  • David Hytner
  • guardian.co.uk, Saturday 23 July 2011 22.54 BST Article history
    Tony-Adams-007.jpg
    Tony Adams says coaches in England need to be given more time. Photograph: Frances Leader/Action Images

    Tony Adams hardly made the most auspicious of starts. Thousands of miles from home and in a tiny town that he surely had not heard of at the beginning of last year, he watched his ticket to managerial redemption threaten to flutter away. After three matches of the Azerbaijani league season, Gabala FC had failed to pick up a point.
    The reaction in England was predictable. If there had been general incomprehension that Adams, the former Arsenal and England titan, had signed an initial three-year contract at a footballing outpost, then it moved to derision in some quarters. He had declared his intention to transform Gabala over a five- to 10-year period. "There was a piece in one of the papers that said: 'Ten years? He's going to be there 10 minutes,'" Adams says.
    He was not worried, though, and this is not a case of being wise after the event. He had been attracted by the principles and vision of Gabala's youthful owner, Tale Heydarov, and he always knew that he was entering a different world. Even the mood at his first post-match press conference had been reassuring.
    "We'd lost 1-0 at Khazar Lenkoran and I'm expecting 30, 40 journalists, cameras, everything," Adams says. "There was one cameraman and two journalists. First question: 'Do you like our supporters?' I said: 'Yes. They made lots of noise, there was 4,000 there, I was very impressed.' And the second question: 'D'you like our stadium?' I said: 'Yes, it's a very nice stadium, a template for the whole country.' End of questions. I said to myself: 'Yes, thank you very much. I've come to the right country.'"
    Adams paints a rosy picture of his challenge away from the Premier League asylum. There is no hostility or pressure, apart from that which he places on himself; he is determined to push for the league title, if not this season then routinely after that. Moreover, there is a long-term plan in place, patience from Heydarov and plenty of cash in further support. Heydarov's father, Kamaladdin, is the government's emergencies minister, whose influence is matched by his wealth.
    Adams's Gabala finished seventh in the 12-team top flight and the glass at the club is decidedly half-full. Adams speaks earnestly and excitedly about the 13,000-capacity stadium that is under construction, while the training ground and academy are being revamped. He describes the former as being "as good as anything in Europe" and it is hoped that the latter, home to 130 boys, can develop young Azeri talent. There is also the wider issue of the football club serving as a driver for tourism and commerce.
    "We've got a plan, we've got a budget and we're going to respect it," Adams says. "Building a stadium, a training ground and a team ... that doesn't happen overnight but it's going to plan. There's no pressure on me to win the league, other than my own pressure and I have time.
    "I said to Tale Heydarov at the very start: 'Give me 100 million, I'll win the league and I'll go home.' But that's not what we're about. The highlight of my first season was that I feel I've been able to develop, to make mistakes but learn from them and go home without 400 interviews, the fans calling for my resignation and the chairman coming in, saying: 'What is going on?'"
    Adams was burned by his angst-ridden spell in charge at Portsmouth, which followed the unsuccessful stint at Wycombe Wanderers in his first managerial job. There is the sense that he has sought to rebuild his reputation under the radar at Gabala, which is somewhat ironic given the club is nicknamed "the Radars"; the town is home to a huge anti-missile facility that was built in Soviet times.
    He denies this, claiming that he would have moved anywhere for the right chairman but, rather like Steve McClaren post-England, he realised it was prudent to emigrate. Adams is back in England on a pre-season tour with Gabala and he feels that the game in this country deserves the sort of monstering he once gave to centre-forwards.
    "I've seen it written that I have gone out on a limb with the move to Gabala but I really don't see it that way," Adams says. "I think that I've actually gone out on a limb if I take a job in England, particularly with the tenures being what they are."
    He has the statistics to hand. "Your average tenure in the Championship, would you believe, is six months," he says, "and in the Premier League, it's 1.3 years. I think that since I went to Azerbaijan on 8 April last year, over 50 of the 92 managers have been sacked or have resigned. It's quite astonishing.
    "That's why I feel we need to repair the credibility of British coaches. Nobody is given time, even in the lower leagues, where owners used to be patient. Football coaching and the management profession is being ripped apart by owners and chief executives. After my Portsmouth experience, I was definitely going to go for the owner in my new job."
    Since his arrival in Gabala, Adams has kept a daily diary. Indeed, he has chronicled many of his experiences since the publication of his autobiography, Addicted, in 1998, which detailed his battle with alcoholism. "I'll have been sober for 15 years on 16 August," he says. "The next book will be called Staying Stopped."
    He has been frank about his problems and there was a flicker from his former life when he told the tale of John Jensen's arrival at Arsenal in 1992. The Dane had the reputation for being a hardened beer drinker and so Adams and the boys took him out to "lunch". "By three o'clock, he was slumped forward, asleep," Adams says.
    His life in Gabala city (population: 13,200) sounds almost monasterial. His wife and three youngest children did not move with him last season &#8211; they will do so next month &#8211; and, with distractions limited, Adams has simply immersed himself in the job.
    "Wherever you take yourself in this world, you've got to take yourself with you," he says. "I like the area, it's very beautiful, with beautiful mountains but, no disrespect, I could live anywhere. I'm OK with myself today, I can live on my own. It's not loneliness, it's solitude. It's a fantastic job and I can actually do this one. It's workable."
    Adams's Azeri journal features insight into the cultural, religious and linguistic diversity he has found. It might also contain anecdotes, from those about the primitive facilities his squad have endured in some places to the club's 100-strong band of drum-beating away supporters. He likens the standard of the league to Scotland "without Rangers and Celtic or maybe the Spanish and Italian second divisions".
    For Adams, the ultimate ambition remains to manage Arsenal. "It's a very easy job compared to the one I have got now," he says. "The resources that Arsène [Wenger] has got ... give me that tomorrow. Yes, please. I love that club dearly. I'm not ready yet. Maybe one day."
    The legacy he intends to create in Gabala would allow him to dream.


 
[h=1]Barton plays down United link[/h] Published 16:20 24/07/11 By MirrorFootball


Newcastle-United-Joey-Barton+cropped


Joey Barton today played down the chances of him leaving Newcastle this summer.
The 28-year-old former Manchester City midfielder was linked in the Sunday Times with a possible move to Manchester United, the latest of several clubs to be tipped to bid for Barton.
But Barton, who has one year left on a Newcastle contract which is unlikely to be renewed, looks set to stay at St James' Park.
He wrote on Twitter: "Nice to be linked with some big clubs today but I honestly don't want to leave Newcastle. Thanks but no thanks."

He added: "I will most likely leave Newcastle at end of season, when my contract expires and I am no longer employed. Its [sic] out of my hands."
 
[h=1]Arsenal set to hijack Chelsea's Lukaku deal[/h] Published 23:01 23/07/11 By Steve Stammers

http://www.mirrorfootball.co.uk/tra...Chelsea-Romelu-Lukaku-bid-article774773.html#
Anderlecht-Romelu-Lukaku+cropped


Arsenal are set to hijack Chelsea's move for giant Belgian Romelu Lukaku.
The Anderlecht striker, who is just 18, is valued at around £17.5m and it was thought his move to Chelsea was virtually a done deal.
But Arsenal boss Arsene Wenger has also been *alerted to the potential of Lukaku, who is already a full Belgium international.
The new Didier Drogba? What Prem fans can actually expect from Romelu Lukaku by our Belgian football expert

Lukaku has bagged 31 league goals in just 71 first team appearances for *Anderlecht and is rated one of the hottest properties in Europe.
His arrival would hasten the departure of the likes of Nicklas Bendtner, who is wanted by Bundesliga clubs Borussia Dortmund and SV Hamburg.
Lukaku is also aware that his chances of playing *regular first team football will be improved by a move to the Emirates. At Stamford Bridge, he would be down the pecking order behind the likes of Fernando Torres, Didier Drogba and Nicolas Anelka.
Drogba, who is entering the final year of his contract, is Lukaku's hero and the two have had conversations about his progress.
The teenager's *massive physique has prompted comparisons with the *Chelsea striker.
But Anderlecht are *adamant Lukaku's success is not based on his stunning physique and prodigious power for one so young. They insist he can play the game as well.
 
[h=1]Transfer news, rumours and gossip from Sunday's papers[/h] Published 10:10 24/07/11 By Football Spy

http://www.mirrorfootball.co.uk/new...Cazorla-Sunday-newspapers-article775399.html#
PaperTalk.jpg


The summer transfer window is hotting up as the new season draws ever closer. Keep on top of all the latest news, rumours and gossip from the printed press and the web here.
Don't miss Darren Lewis' guide to the Top 30 summer transfers still to happen .
And don't forget you can use your football knowledge to win hard cash by playing our Fantasy Football game You The Manager. There are 2,800 ways to win - and if you sign up NOW then your first team is on us .
Transfer stories from today's Sunday Mirror

Arsenal set to hijack Chelsea's Lukaku deal
Arsenal primed to go back for Jagielka and Parker
EXCLUSIVE: Contract talks break down for City star
EXCLUSIVE: City won't cut deal with European clubs for £50m Tevez
Adel Taarabt going nowhere say QPR bosses
EXCLUSIVE Shaun Wright-Phillips refuses to give up on City career
Board back Wenger to keep Nasri with Gunners
Chelsea move to fill Essien gap with Barca starlet
Fulham keeper set to decide on loan destination this week
Leeds in battle to keep star forward as nine clubs close in
Transfer stories from today's Sunday People
Atletico striker expected to sign for Man City within 48 hours
Sir Alex insists no one will buy Carlos Tevez
Spurs keen to land Atletico striker for free
Man United consider swoop for young Brazilian hot shot
Liverpool keen to swoop for Wigan ace
Newcastle agree fee for Paris St Germain striker
QPR eye loan move for Spurs striker
Everton star set to ask for a move home to Spain
Barcelona hope for answers on Fabregas bid tomorrow
West Ham join race for ex-Man United star
Chelsea keen to land French star as Essien replacement
Villa boss targets two Brum old boys
Man City midfielder a target for Leeds
Rovers move in for promising Atletico Madrid youngster
Wednesday in £300k swoop for Huddersfield winger
Bolton keen to land Liverpool striker
Burnley keen to seal loan deal for Arsenal defender
Today's transfer stories from other papers and websites
Manchester United boss Alex Ferguson is plotting a shock move for Newcastle midfielder Joey Barton . (Sunday Times)
Chelsea are set to up the ante in their hunt for Luka Modric by offering Tottenham £27m plus 21-year-old striker Daniel Sturridge for the Croatian midfielder. (Daily Star on Sunday)
New Chelsea boss Andre Villas-Boas is also set to raid his former club Porto for midfielder Joao Moutinho . (Mail on Sunday)
Palermo vice-president Guglielmo Micciche says that Javier Pastore could be on his way to Chelsea , and claims negotiations are at an "advanced" stage. (Goal.com)
Arsenal will battle with Malaga for Villarreal's Spain winger Santi Cazorla. (Metro)
Turkish side Galatasaray have made a £4m offer for Arsenal right-back Emmanuel Eboue . (Mail on Sunday)
Everton will let Jack Rodwell leave, if they can get £20m for him, which would allow them to sign Wigan star Charles N'Zogbia . (Metro)
But Aston Villa are expected to push through a £10million deal for Wigan winger Charles N'Zogbia this week despite Everton's bid to hijack the deal. (Mail on Sunday)
Manchester City striker Emmanuel Adebayor will snub a loan move to Tottenham to hold out for a return to Real Madrid, where he spent last season on loan. (Mail on Sunday)
 
[h=1]Nani ready for first team fight at United[/h] Published 13:47 24/07/11 By MirrorFootball

http://www.mirrorfootball.co.uk/new...er-Ashley-Young-s-arrival-article775442.html#
Manchester-United-Nani+cropped


Nani has claimed he will be inspired by the intense battle for first-team spots at Manchester United this season.
The arrival of Ashley Young from Aston Villa has provided immediate competition for the winger, who with Antonio Valencia sidelined for most of last term, was the only orthodox wide-man at Sir Alex Ferguson's disposal.
Danny Welbeck has operated on the flanks and is now available after a successful loan spell at Sunderland, whilst Mame Biram Diouf was picked there for the first half of yesterday's 3-1 win over Chicago Fire.
Chicago Fire 1-3 Manchester United: Rooney to the rescue as Red Devils maintain winning record

However, Nani, who scored the visitors' final goal at Soldier Field, is adamant he does not intend to take a backward step.
"The competition is good," he said.
"It inspires you. If you have competition, you will train harder and push yourself in every game.
"At Manchester United, you have to be ready every time you go on the field."
The 24-year-old contributed nine goals and 18 assists - the highest in the league - to United's record 19th championship triumph.
Yet it still was not enough to earn him a starting spot for the Champions League final defeat to Barcelona in May.
It must have come as a bitter blow to a player who started the campaign so well, but tailed off just as Valencia was recovering from the broken ankle he sustained in September.
In the aftermath of that loss, and with Ferguson looking at how best to strengthen a team that was so badly outplayed at Wembley, there were plenty happy to write off Nani's Red Devils career completely.
But he returned for the current five-match tour of the United States, and appears in the right frame of mind to provide an even greater contribution this time around.
"Of course I can get better," he said.
"That is what I am trying to do. It is not easy but it is what I look to achieve every year.
"If I can get more goals and more assists, that will be good for the team and help us in all the competitions we are going for."
Nani believes improvement will be required too.
For, whilst United proved good enough to finish top of the pile last season, with Manchester City trying to get stronger and Liverpool expected to challenge along with Arsenal and last year's runners-up Chelsea, Nani is anticipating an even fiercer battle for supremacy.
"In every season it is important to start well," he said.
"But it is even more the case now because this season will be much harder than the last couple.
"All the teams are getting stronger and trying to be much better. We have to match that."
Although yesterday's first-half showing was the least convincing of United's performances so far, Sir Alex Ferguson was reasonably satisfied.
Goalkeeper David de Gea and former Blackburn defender Phil Jones made decent debuts.
Sir Alex Ferguson retracted an initial thought that De Gea was responsible for Chicago Fire's early opener and by the time he has bulked up, which United's medical staff insist will happen over time, he should be a positive influence.
The same is already true of Javier Hernandez, who is expected to join United on the next leg of their journey, to New York, where they will face an MLS All-Stars side containing David Beckham and Thierry Henry at Red Bull Arena on Wednesday.
"It was tough for him last season but over time, Javier will mature and get better," said Ferguson.
"He is improving technically and now he has had a good season behind him in a tough division.
"We are setting targets for him. We thought he would get 20 last season and he did.
"He might do even better this time."
United complete their tour in Washington next Saturday when they square up to Barcelona in a rematch of that one-sided European final.
With Lionel Messi missing, it hardly represents an opportunity for revenge.
It will be a guide though, with Nani convinced United have what it takes to get revenge in Munich next year, when the European Cup will be up for grabs again.
"We have to be ready for the challenge," he said.
"Barcelona play fantastic football and are the best team in the world at present.
"But we have the conditions to be better in the future."
Fergie: I won't sign Scholes replacement
Man United tour blog: Fergie changes the habit of a lifetime for US fans - and there's video to prove it!
 
[h=1]José Enrique blasts Newcastle's transfer policy and lack of ambition[/h] &#8226; 'This club will never again fight to be among the top six'
&#8226; Joey Barton says he is staying at Newcastle




  • Press Association
  • guardian.co.uk, Sunday 24 July 2011 23.17 BST Article history
    Jos--Enrique-007.jpg
    José Enrique has said that Newcastle will not finish in the top six if the club continue with their current policies. Photograph: Ian Horrocks/Newcastle Utd via Getty Images

    The Newcastle United left-back José Enrique has attacked the club's transfer policy claiming that if they continue in the same manner they will never manage the top-six finish in the Premier League that everyone on Tyneside craves.
    The Spaniard also accused his employers of a lack of ambition and claimed he had been offered no improvement on his salary, despite the fact that the Newcastle manager, Alan Pardew, said in May that the club would make Enrique a "fantastic" offer.
    Writing on his Twitter feed, first in Spanish then in English, Enrique said: "The club is allowing all the major players of the team to go. Seriously, do you think it is the fault of the players? Andy [Carroll], nobby [Kevin Nolan] etc etc. This club will never again fight to be among the top six again with this policy."
    Paying tribute to the club's fans, he said: "I think you fans are the best and you deserve the best, not what they are doing with the club. Thanks to everyone for supporting me."
    Switching to English in response to a post, he then wrote:
    "The [sic] give the money I have already. They lie all the time. But is no for money is because they don't want spend in the club and bring quality players that's why everybody go [sic]."
    Enrique, who joined Newcastle from Villarreal in 2007, has reportedly drawn interest from Liverpool and Arsenal this summer.
    Joey Barton's future with the Magpies has also been the subject of speculation but he earlier played down the chances of him leaving.
    The 28-year-old former Manchester City midfielder was linked in the Sunday Times with a possible move to Manchester United, the latest of several clubs to be tipped to bid for Barton. But Barton wrote on Twitter: "Nice to be linked with some big clubs today but I honestly don't want to leave Newcastle. Thanks but no thanks.
    "I will most likely leave Newcastle at end of season, when my contract expires and I am no longer employed. It's out of my hands."

 








[h=1]Mario Balotelli substituted in disgrace on Manchester City's US tour[/h] &#8226; Backheel by Italian in front of goal incenses Roberto Mancini
&#8226; Striker confronts manager after being taken off at LA Galaxy




  • Daniel Taylor in Carson
  • guardian.co.uk, Sunday 24 July 2011 22.26 BST Article history
    Mario Balotelli's remarkable talent for finding new ways to embroil himself in controversy resurfaced on Manchester City's pre-season trip to Los Angeles when the Italian was substituted in disgrace only 30 minutes into a friendly against LA Galaxy.
    Balotelli then became involved in a touchline row with his manager, Roberto Mancini, and angrily threw a water bottle on to the pitch after taking his seat among the substitutes.
    The striker had gone clean through on goal a few minutes earlier but, rather than finishing off an easy chance, he turned full circle, flicking the ball behind his legs and trying to score with a backheel. It was a remarkable act of self-indulgence and, as the ball went wide, several of his team-mates, particularly Edin Dzeko, could be seen remonstrating with him.
    Balotelli had opened the scoring from the penalty spot but Mancini was so incensed with the showboating that he immediately signalled for James Milner to replace the former Internazionale striker. The manager studiously ignored Balotelli as he was substituted only for the player to confront him and demand to know why he had been replaced. Mancini rose to his feet and started to berate him angrily before Balotelli stalked off.
    "I hope this is a lesson for him," said Mancini, who hopes a deal for the Atlético Madrid striker, Sergio Agüero, can be done in the next four or five days. "In football you always need to be professional, always serious and in this moment he wasn't professional. He needs to understand his behaviour has to be good in every game &#8211; not just in a final or a semi-final but every game.
    "He knows he made a mistake. Football should always be serious and if you have a chance to score, you should score. If you are serious, you can play 90 minutes. If not, you can come and sit by me on the bench. Mario is young, I want to help him and that is the end of it. To take him off after 30 minutes is enough punishment. It won't have been easy for him but it has to be a lesson."
    Asked what Balotelli had said to him, he replied: "It was in Italian. In English I would find it difficult to give you the translation. But Mario is streetwise, he knows he was not offside."
    Mancini's attitude towards the 20-year-old reinforces the sense of a manager who is not going to indulge anyone in his determination this season to have a side with genuine aspirations of challenging for the major honours. Balotelli scored 10 goals in 28 appearances after signing for £25m last summer, but he also picked up 11 yellow cards and two reds and will be suspended for the team's first three Champions League games because of the sending-off against Dynamo Kiev that contributed to City's elimination from the last 16 of the Europa League.
    Balotelli's list of misdemeanours since joining the club has been long and extensive, including a training-ground fight with Jerome Boateng and an internal inquiry after he was seen throwing darts at youth-team players from the window of a training-ground building. Even after his red card against Kiev, Balotelli became embroiled in an argument with City's supporters, getting out of his car as he left the ground to remonstrate with a group of fans in the street.
    Mancini still firmly believes the good outweighs the bad but their relationship has been fractious at times and, elsewhere in the club, there is little patience for a man whose final act last season was to fly back to Italy &#8211; against the orders of his employers &#8211; and miss the club's player-of-the-season awards dinner as well as the FA Cup parade. For that, Balotelli received a heavy club fine and another lecture from Mancini about the importance of growing up, making the most of his undoubted talent and taking more responsibility.
    Balotelli had taken off his City shirt before leaving the pitch at half-time and did not re-emerge for the second half of a 1-1 draw in which David Beckham played the opening 45 minutes for the home side. The Galaxy substitute Mike Magee scored the equaliser in the 53rd minute before City won 7-6 in a penalty shoot-out that ended with their goalkeeper, Joe Hart, scoring the winner. Mancini's team now head to Dublin for a weekend tournament, with a game against Inter arranged for Sunday.
 
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[h=1]Edin Dzeko: I will show fans why Manchester City paid £27m for me[/h] &#8226; Edin Dzeko keen to put poor first season at City behind him
&#8226; Striker many have to fight with Agüero and Tevez for place




  • Daniel Taylor in Los Angeles
  • guardian.co.uk, Sunday 24 July 2011 23.00 BST Article history
    Edin-Dzeko-Manchester-Cit-007.jpg
    Edin Dzeko scored only one goal in 14 league appearances last season after joining City from Wolfsburg in January. Photograph: Nigel Roddis/Reuters

    Edin Dzeko, one of the Manchester City players with the most to prove next season, is confident he can put aside the memories of a difficult first season at the club and begin to justify his £27m price tag.
    Dzeko managed only one league goal in 14 appearances after signing from Wolfsburg in January. The Bosnia international scored four times in six cup games but became a peripheral figure and, at times, looked out of touch and low on confidence.
    "I was new to the team and it was a hard season," Dzeko said from the team's pre-season base in Los Angeles. "It's always difficult to come to a new club midway through a hard season like that, and maybe when I arrived I was sick of all the talk about the transfer. It got to my head a little bit. But I still think I had some good games and scored some important goals.
    "I've had a pre-season with the team now, which I think is the most important thing for every player, and I think I'm working hard and so we'll see what happens in the season. I know this season will be much better. Every player needs time to settle in and to get used to a new club, from knowing the league, to the other players &#8211; everything."
    Dzeko was an unused substitute in the FA Cup final and faces a battle to get a sustained run in the team, given that it increasingly looks like Sergio Agüero will be joining the club and with the possibility Carlos Tevez may have to stick around for a little longer yet.
    Dzeko's hope is that the team will start playing more to his strengths, specifically with orthodox wingers who get to the byline and deliver crosses. "Every striker is stronger when we play with wingers," he says. That way, Dzeko believes he can make the most of his aerial ability to demonstrate why he was such a prolific striker in the Bundesliga.
    "Manchester City didn't pay all that money for me because they saw me once on YouTube. They saw me scoring good goals. And I haven't forgotten how to score goals. I will show that next season."
    He is also encouraged by his feedback from the manager, Roberto Mancini. "He's telling me all the time: 'I believe in you and continue to work hard', and that's what I'm doing."

 
[h=1]Josh McEachran's promise gives Chelsea hope of a balanced future[/h] &#8226; Midfielder shows the way forward for ageing squad
&#8226; 'He is an amazing British talent for the future,' says Villas-Boas




  • Thailand-All-Stars-v-Chel-007.jpg
    Florent Malouda, far right, celebrates his goal with his Chelsea team-mates in the 4-0 win in Bangkok. Photograph: Chris McGrath/Getty Images

    Chelsea are growing used to accusations that theirs is an ageing squad in urgent need of rejuvenation. The latest was delivered over the weekend by Sir Alex Ferguson, surveying the early days of the André Villas-Boas tenure from distant Chicago, so it felt strangely appropriate that the first hint of a riposte was promptly delivered on the other side of the world by a rising young talent in the London club's ranks.
    Josh McEachran, at 18, had offered evidence last season that he could become this club's Jack Wilshere. His tidy passing impressed in cameos across the competitions, with the five-year contract signed on the eve of the team's Asian tour just reward for the progress he has made. Now integrated fully into the senior squad, and a starter again in the 4-0 defeat of a Thailand All Stars XI on Sunday, he offers constant glimpses of what awaits this team. Not all in their number are seasoned.
    There was composure in possession and one neat reverse pass here that particularly caught the eye, liberating a rampaging Branislav Ivanovic to sprint into enemy territory and slide in Chelsea's third and most impressive goal. Villas-Boas described McEachran as "an amazing British talent for the future" in the aftermath, with his continued progress presumably a key part of bridging eras in the long-term reinvention of this team.
    "Josh offers flexibility," said the manager. "I don't want to focus a lot on one player, but it's all in his brain. He anticipates problems and has that speed of thought, that kind of capacity to anticipate things." Wilshere boasts those same qualities at Arsenal. McEachran will still need to be physically stronger to thrive, but his raw talent is reassuring.
    Ferguson had been assessing the challengers to Manchester United's title when he pinpointed Chelsea as "the most experienced team in the Premier League", praise he tempered by warning they are approaching an "evolutionary stage and the new manager hasn't signed anyone yet, so that will be a bit of a concern". But, although nine of the first-team squad are over 30, what progress Chelsea have made in the market has been in recruiting the next generation. Thibault Courtois, the goalkeeper signed from Genk, is 19, as is the midfielder Oriol Romeu, who is en route from Barcelona B. They also hope to add Romelu Lukaku, 18, from Anderlecht. Integrate these players into the first team over the next two seasons and that ageist accusation will seem less appropriate.
    The United manager had said the same three years ago, when Luiz Felipe Scolari was settling into the manager's position at Stamford Bridge. That the senior personnel remain virtually identical is revealing. But, for now, Villas-Boas is unconcerned. His own policy, he claims, is "wise". The reality is that Chelsea remain no closer to securing their most lavish transfer target, Luka Modric. Should the impasse remain for much longer with Tottenham Hotspur, then Villas-Boas is likely to seek instead to return to his former club for his compatriot João Moutinho as a pedigree alternative.
    There remains a lack of invention and speed in the pass to this midfield, with McEachran learning and the forward line &#8211; Fernando Torres chief among them &#8211; craving slicker service. The tempo will improve with fitness, but the thrashing of the Thailand All Stars, a concoction of players from the local Premier division hastily bundled together, revealed very little. Thrusting on eight substitutes just after the hour against the tiring home players gave the scoreline a gloss that the first-half performance had hardly merited. Their play was still stodgy at times. It said much that McEachran's poise and passing were what chiefly drew the focus.
    The squad will continue their energy-sapping pre-season in Hong Kong as of Monday with the manager insistent the elder statesmen, upon whom he will still rely, will cope with the rigours ahead. "You just have to respect the recovery periods needed for those players who are older in the squad," said Villas-Boas.
    "Chelsea are the second or third oldest team in the Premier League but, again, look at the trophies these players have won and how successful they have been. We are looking to find the correct balance between experience and youth, that is all. These players have a lot to offer."
    Chelsea (4-3-3): Cech (Hilário, h-t; Blackman, 77); Bosingwa (Ferreira, 62), Ivanovic (Chalobah, 77), Terry (Rajkovic, 62), Van Aanholt (Cole, 62); Lampard (Zhirkov, 62), Mikel (Clifford, 77), McEachran (Benayoun, 62); Anelka (Kalou, 62), Torres (Drogba, 62), Sturridge (Malouda, 62).

 
[h=1]Ferdinand: United must improve on 'shocking' away form to retain title[/h] Published 23:01 24/07/11 By David McDonnell in Los Angeles

http://www.mirrorfootball.co.uk/new...-the-Premier-League-title-article775542.html#
rio-ferdinand-manchester-united-cropped


Rio Ferdinand has admitted Manchester United must improve their "shocking" away form next season if they are to retain the Premier League title.
United dropped just two points at Old Trafford last season, but had the worst away record of any champions since the Premier League was formed, winning just five times on the road.
With United facing Tottenham, Arsenal, Chelsea, Liverpool and Manchester City in their first 10 games, Ferdinand admitted Sir Alex Ferguson's side cannot afford a repeat of last season's sloppy start.
United registered just one win in their opening eight away games last season and Ferdinand said failure to improve on that poor record could see Ferguson's side release their grip on the title.

"When you look at the fixtures, our enemies couldn't have picked it any better," said Ferdinand.
"You have to play everyone at some stage of the season and we normally get the top teams around late October or early November.
"This season is different, but the league will take shape around Christmas time. We had an unbelievable home record last season, but our away record was shocking.
"So if we can balance it out a bit better this season, then I'm sure we'll be up there again fighting.
"If I knew the reason for it [poor away form] then I'd be manager! But we know we need to hit the ground running when the new season starts.
"It was crazy last season, because there was a real difference in terms of the way things panned out, dropping just two points at home and then losing loads of games away.
"I think it can get into your system a little bit, yes. We were 2-0 up in a number of games and got pegged back to 2-2 or lost the game.
"That's never been heard of before while I've been here so hopefully we can put that to bed."
United take on an MLS All-Stars team, which will include David Beckham and Thierry Henry, in New Jersey on Wednesday, before concluding their three-week tour of the US in Washington where they will play Barcelona on August 30 in a repeat of last season's Champions League final.
Ferdinand said the tour had given United's players the perfect platform from which to get themselves in peak shape for the forthcoming season. "It's been all we could ask for really," said Ferdinand.
"Fitness is the main reason for being here and the results are kind of secondary, but it's always nice to get some wins and come through the games unscathed. By the time we get back from here I hope we'll be as sharp as we like to be."
Although United ended up winning last season's championship by nine points, Ferdinand is expecting a much more competitive title race this time around, with Chelsea, Manchester City and Arsenal posing a major threat.
"By the time we won the title last season there were only a couple of games left," said Ferdinand. "We beat Chelsea towards the end of the season so come the end it didn't really feel like a nine point gap.
"It still went down to the last few games and I think this one will be close again. It's always close. No-one runs away with it anymore.
"The challengers will be the same as normal. Chelsea and Manchester City. With the money they've spent, City will go a bit closer this season. Arsenal will be there too, if they can keep the players they've got."
 
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