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Transfer news...

[h=1]Yuri Zhirkov sale would free Chelsea squad place for Luka Modric[/h] • Russian set to join Anzhi Makhachkala for £13m
• Chelsea likely to make new bid to sign Modric from Tottenham




  • Dominic Fifield
  • guardian.co.uk, Monday 1 August 2011 18.37 BST Article history
    Yuri-Zhirkov-007.jpg
    Chelsea's Yuri Zhirkov looks set to leave London and join the Russian club Anzhi Makhachkala for £13m. Photograph: Bazuki Muhammad/Reuters

    Chelsea are close to selling their underused Russia international Yuri Zhirkov to Anzhi Makhachkala, a move that will free up a space in the Premier League side's 25-man squad ahead of a third bid for the Tottenham Hotspur midfielder Luka Modric.
    Zhirkov, who is 28 this month, has found his opportunities limited at Stamford Bridge following an £18m transfer from CSK Moscow in 2009. The left-sided defender or midfielder struggled initially to cope with the physicality of the game in England, his impact admittedly hampered by a knee injury, but his prospects of dislodging Ashley Cole from left‑back, or Frank Lampard in midfield, had always felt slim.
    After 29 league appearances in two years, he is expected to sign a four‑year deal with the Russian Premier League side after a medical. Cole's understudy will now be either Patrick van Aanholt or Ryan Bertrand.
    Chelsea had been concerned that Zhirkov might see out the remaining year of his contract before leaving under the Bosman ruling next summer, with potential suitors put off by the salary he enjoys in London, so Makhachkala's interest has been welcomed. The Russian club were purchased by Suleyman Kerimov this year and have recruited players such as Roberto Carlos, with their lavish spending likely to include a fee of around £13m spent on returning Zhirkov to Russia.
    His sale will free up one of the 17 places available for senior non-home-grown players in Chelsea's 25-man squad, a vacancy they still hope to fill with Modric. Bids of £22m and £27m have been rejected by Spurs, whose chairman, Daniel Levy, has insisted the playmaker is not for sale, only for the Tottenham assistant manager, Kevin Bond, to admit on Monday – but later deny – that the player "has a price".
    A third offer is expected to be made this week once André Villas-Boas, Chelsea's manager, has met his chief executive, Ron Gourlay, to discuss transfer policy.
    "If somebody came along and the money turns your head and he did go – although the chairman is adamant he doesn't want to see him – then we'd have to get on with it," Bond told TalkSport. "We desperately don't want to lose him, but everyone has a price."
    Later Bond said in a statement: "For the purpose of clarification and in case my comments this morning inadvertently misled anyone, the club's position on Luka Modric is quite clear – we have no intention of selling him."


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Yuri Zhirkov sale would free Chelsea squad place for Luka Modric

• Russian set to join Anzhi Makhachkala for £13m
• Chelsea likely to make new bid to sign Modric from Tottenham

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Dominic Fifield
guardian.co.uk, Monday 1 August 2011 18.37 BST
Article history

Yuri Zhirkov
Chelsea's Yuri Zhirkov looks set to leave London and join the Russian club Anzhi Makhachkala for £13m. Photograph: Bazuki Muhammad/Reuters

Chelsea are close to selling their underused Russia international Yuri Zhirkov to Anzhi Makhachkala, a move that will free up a space in the Premier League side's 25-man squad ahead of a third bid for the Tottenham Hotspur midfielder Luka Modric.

Zhirkov, who is 28 this month, has found his opportunities limited at Stamford Bridge following an £18m transfer from CSK Moscow in 2009. The left-sided defender or midfielder struggled initially to cope with the physicality of the game in England, his impact admittedly hampered by a knee injury, but his prospects of dislodging Ashley Cole from left‑back, or Frank Lampard in midfield, had always felt slim.

After 29 league appearances in two years, he is expected to sign a four‑year deal with the Russian Premier League side after a medical. Cole's understudy will now be either Patrick van Aanholt or Ryan Bertrand.

Chelsea had been concerned that Zhirkov might see out the remaining year of his contract before leaving under the Bosman ruling next summer, with potential suitors put off by the salary he enjoys in London, so Makhachkala's interest has been welcomed. The Russian club were purchased by Suleyman Kerimov this year and have recruited players such as Roberto Carlos, with their lavish spending likely to include a fee of around £13m spent on returning Zhirkov to Russia.

His sale will free up one of the 17 places available for senior non-home-grown players in Chelsea's 25-man squad, a vacancy they still hope to fill with Modric. Bids of £22m and £27m have been rejected by Spurs, whose chairman, Daniel Levy, has insisted the playmaker is not for sale, only for the Tottenham assistant manager, Kevin Bond, to admit on Monday – but later deny – that the player "has a price".

A third offer is expected to be made this week once André Villas-Boas, Chelsea's manager, has met his chief executive, Ron Gourlay, to discuss transfer policy.

"If somebody came along and the money turns your head and he did go – although the chairman is adamant he doesn't want to see him – then we'd have to get on with it," Bond told TalkSport. "We desperately don't want to lose him, but everyone has a price."

Later Bond said in a statement: "For the purpose of clarification and in case my comments this morning inadvertently misled anyone, the club's position on Luka Modric is quite clear – we have no intention of selling him."

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Mario Balotelli

I don't like Manchester, admits Balotelli

Homesick Mario Balotelli says he does not like the city and misses his family and friends in Italy

City can be as good as Barça, says Touré

Modric has his price says Spurs' Bond

See also

1 Jul 2011

Chelsea consider entering the race for Arsenal's Samir Nasri

18 Jun 2011

Daniel Levy tells Chelsea to forget about signing Luka Modric

6 Jul 2009

Carlo Ancelotti confirms Yuri Zhirkov has joined Chelsea from CSKA Moscow

29 Jun 2009

Chelsea secure Yuri Zhirkov from CSKA Moscow for £18m

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[h=1]Sir Alex Ferguson coy over Dimitar Berbatov's Manchester United future[/h] • Ferguson says striker could 'absolutely' play for PSG
• United manager gives cryptic response to French journalist




  • Daniel Taylor
  • The Guardian, Wednesday 3 August 2011 Article history
    dimitar-berbatov-007.jpg
    Dimitar Berbatov's future at Manchester United was cast into doubt by cryptic comments from Sir Alex Ferguson. Photograph: Chris Trotman/Getty Images

    Sir Alex Ferguson has cast doubt over the future of Dimitar Berbatov at Manchester United after appearing to suggest that the Bulgarian could leave the club.
    Ferguson made the admission after his reserve side's 8-2 defeat in a charity match against Marseille in Monaco on Tuesday evening. A French television journalist asked the United manager if Berbatov could play with Paris St-Germain, who are interested in signing the striker. "Yes," a smiling Ferguson replied. "Absolutely, no problem."
    The French club are reportedly willing to pay £18-£20m, which would help United to recoup some of the £50m they have spent so far this summer on Ashley Young, David de Gea and Phil Jones.
    Berbatov was United's top scorer last season and, alongside Carlos Tevez, the joint winner of the Premier League's golden boot, but Ferguson appears to have lost trust in the Bulgarian's ability to influence the more important matches. The club-record £30.75m signing from Tottenham Hotspur was not even on the substitutes' bench for the Champions League final against Barcelona in May, a decision that devastated him to the point he did not even leave the Wembley dressing rooms.
    Nonetheless, Ferguson's statement represents a considerable change of direction for the champions, who have maintained all summer that Berbatov is not for sale and can still play a significant part in their attempt to win a 20th league title next season.
    David Gill, the United chief executive, said at the weekend that the club had never considered moving on the Bulgarian. "Everyone has been talking about Berbatov from the outside, saying he wants to leave or that we want him to leave, but we don't want him to go. We want him to stay. He scored 20 goals last season, so there is no desire on our behalf to see him go."
    Gill also said nothing sinister was to be drawn from the fact Berbatov was the only player at the club in the final year of his contract not yet to be offered an extension. "People keep telling me he's in the final year of his contract but there is an option on the club's side to extend Dimitar's contract by another year. We can do it whenever we want, there are no conditions around it and that means, in effect, he has two years to go."
    It also makes Berbatov more valuable in the market if PSG, who have a £37.7m deal in place for Palermo's Javier Pastore that would smash the French transfer record, are serious about adding him to their new-look side.
    Ferguson also attempted to brush off the latest speculation about Wesley Sneijder, saying it was "just all the newspapers" when he was asked about the possibility of signing the Holland international from Internazionale.
    United have been trying to play down the matter for weeks, repeatedly informing reporters they are not interested in the player, but a deal is actually in place providing Sneijder agrees to lower his financial requirements.
    Ferguson was quoted in one Sunday newspaper saying: "If he [Sneijder] wants to come, he must accept our contract offer. If not, we have other options in mind. We're done talking." The United manager has since denied saying such a thing but this is, in fact, the accurate and latest position.

 
[h=1]Fine fuels Joey Barton's war of words with Newcastle United[/h] • For-sale midfielder fined two weeks' wages by Newcastle
• West Ham and Everton thought to be interested in Barton




  • Louise Taylor
  • guardian.co.uk, Tuesday 2 August 2011 21.06 BST Article history
    Joey-Barton-007.jpg
    Joey Barton quoted George Orwell in one of his tweets regarding his souring relationship with Newcastle United. Photograph: Owen Humphreys/PA

    Joey Barton was cold‑shouldered by Alan Pardew, ordered to train alone and fined two weeks' wages by Newcastle United on Tuesday but, undeterred, the transfer‑listed midfielder drew solace from George Orwell.
    As Barton used his Twitter account to declare that "In times of universal deceit, telling the truth will be a revolutionary act", assorted clubs weighed up the possibility of signing him after Newcastle's decision to offload their troublesome talent on a free transfer.
    West Ham United and Everton are reportedly among the clubs keeping tabs on the midfielder, and Pardew was said to be privately hoping the 28-year-old will be gone by the weekend. "There won't be a problem finding Joey a home," said Barton's agent, Willie McKay.
    Newcastle's manager has stepped up his long-standing pursuit of Tranquillo Barnetta, the £6m‑rated Bayer Leverkusen and Switzerland right‑winger. With José Enrique – who, like Barton, has used Twitter to express his dissatisfaction with the Newcastle board's summer spending plans – believed to be close to leaving St James' Park following an offer from an unnamed club, possibly Liverpool, Pardew is also in the market for a left‑back.
    Ideally he would like to sign Manchester City's Wayne Bridge but the former England defender's £90,000‑a‑week wages are a stumbling block.
    Meanwhile Barton's suggestions, delivered via Twitter, that there is widespread dressing‑room dissent at Newcastle have been countered by well‑sourced revelations that his behaviour was part of the problem. Barton, who is reported to have ranted at team‑mates following defeat at Leeds United in a friendly last Sunday, is said to be deeply upset that he was overlooked as captain, with Pardew preferring to give Shola Ameobi the armband at Elland Road. His mood darkened further when Yohan Cabaye, Newcastle's new French playmaker, was instructed to take all set‑pieces.
    Retorting via Twitter, Barton claimed club officials were feeding "false statements" to the local media. He then tweeted: "I also have too much respect for my team-mates and fans to get in a tit-for-tat with them. I have too much self worth and dignity." Responding to the fine, he reflected: "Ha, ha the inevitable two weeks wages fine has just arrived. Needless to say, it will be appealed forthwith."
    Newcastle officials will waive a fee for a player with one year outstanding on his contract. It seems a formidable on‑field motivator has become an increasingly divisive off‑field figure, with Barton's often erratic behaviour deteriorating on an almost daily basis in the wake of the club withdrawing a longstanding offer of a contract extension this summer.
    Barton will argue that he wanted assurances that the £35m raised from the sale of Andy Carroll to Liverpool in January would be reinvested in new players but events took, from his viewpoint, a further unpalatable turn when his close friend Kevin Nolan was sold to West Ham. As the Newcastle captain, Nolan had excelled at "man-managing" his sometimes unpredictable fellow scouser.
    Although Sam Allardyce, the manager who brought Barton to Newcastle from Manchester City , would be keen to reunite him with Nolan at Upton Park, the Championship is unlikely to appeal. Instead Barton believes he is good enough to play Champions League football.

 
[h=1]From Alexis Sánchez to Manuel Neuer: Our European transfers round-up[/h] Had enough of Fábregas, Nasri and Modric stories? Here is a rundown of how the main clubs in Europe are conducting business in the transfer market



  • Marcus Christenson
  • guardian.co.uk, Tuesday 2 August 2011 23.36 BST Article history
    Alexis-Sanchez-007.jpg
    Ah, the joy of a completed signing. Barcelona's new recruit Alexis Sánchez poses for the media during his presentation. Photograph: David Ramos/Getty Images

    While England have been stuck in a seemingly perpetual cycle of Cesc Fábregas, Samir Nasri and Luka Modric rumours, bids, rejections and denials, the rest of Europe's top clubs are quietly getting on with their transfer business. In Spain, José Mourinho's masterplan for ending Barcelona's dominance is gathering pace; in Italy, Juventus have invested heavily in an attempt to challenge Milan and Internazionale at the top of Serie A; and in Germany Bayern Munich have reacted to their third-place finish last season by investing more than €40m (£35m) in new players while last season's title winner's, Borussia Dortmund, have lost their key playmaker, Nuri Sahin, to Real Madrid.
    But it's not all about the big clubs. Let's not forget about the other movers and shakers this summer. Whatever happened to Jérémie Aliadière? Where has Djibril Cissé ended up? And which club has invested in the not inconsiderable talents of Jozy Altidore?
    Find out below and let us know which players we have forgotten about/failed to mention and whether our verdicts on the main clubs are too harsh or just too kind.
    [h=2]Spain[/h]Real Madrid: This summer has been all about how Mourinho can find an answer to Barcelona's all-conquering brand of tiki-taka. The Portuguese has once again put his faith in players from the Bundesliga, following up the signings of Mesut Ozil and Sami Khedira last summer with the captures of the midfielders Nuri Sahin (Borussia Dortmund) and Hamit Altintop (Bayern Munich). Altintop is a strange one – he struggled to get into Bayern's starting XI last season – but Sahin was crucial to Dortmund's outstanding title-winning side. Mourinho also paid an eye-watering €30m for the 23-year-old full-back Fábio Coentrão from Benfica and while it is fair to wonder if any left-back can possibly be worth that much, it should be added that he can also play as a left-winger, right-winger and in central midfield. Angel di María, for one, should be nervous about keeping his place in the team. The 18-year-old central defender Raphaël Varane, who Manchester United desperately wanted to sign, could prove a snip at €10m. José Callejón, who can play as a winger or a forward, has rejoined the club where he started in a €5.5m deal from Espanyol. Business so far: 9/10
    Barcelona: How do you improve on perfection? That is the task facing Pep Guardiola this summer and, apart from the Fábregas saga, the manager has tinkered with his forward line, selling Bojan Krkic (for two years at least – Barça then have a buy-back clause) to Roma and bringing in Alexis Sánchez from Udinese. And there is no doubt that the Chilean will add something different to Bojan. SánchezThe Chile international, who reportedly cost more than €30m with an array of add-ons, can play on the right, on the left or in the centre of a three-man attack and is a hard worker. No wonder the rest of Europe were also keen to sign him. Business so far: 7/10
    Málaga: The club did not have the best of seasons in 2010-11 under their new owner, Sheikh Abdullah Bin Nassar al-Thani, a member of the Qatari royal family, and finished 11th, but have been aggressive in the transfer market this summer. Santi Cazorla (for a fee believed to be €21m) from Villarreal is the biggest of 10 (and counting) signings so far and a place in the Champions League must surely be a minimum requirement for Manuel Pellegrini's side. The French midfielder Jérémy Toulalan should be an excellent signing from Lyon for a fee of €11m while Ruud van Nistelrooy is likely to score goals until he is in his forties. He is back in Spain after leaving Hamburg on a free and his team-mate at the German club, the Dutch defender Joris Mathijsen, has rocked up in Málaga. The Argentinian midfielder Diego Buonanotte is an intriguing prospect (from River Plate for €4.5m) while it remains to be seen whether Pellegrini can work his magic with Joaquín Sánchez, the former wonder kid who has joined from Valencia for a mere €4.2m. Business so far: 8/10
    [h=2]Italy[/h]Milan: The most expensive business for the champions was to complete the purchase from Barcelona of Zlatan Ibrahimovic with the fee landing somewhere in the region of €24m. The 18-year-old Stephan El Shaarawy is an exciting addition from Genoa for €8m-€10m. The playmaker, who has an Egyptian father and Italian mother and has already been called up for the Italian Under-21 team, scored seven goals in 25 Serie B appearances for Padova last season. Kevin-Prince Boateng, formerly of Tottenham and Portsmouth, has made his move from Genoa (for whom he never played) permanent in a €7m deal while Philippe Mexès could be a useful addition to a sometimes creaking defence. The French central defender has arrived from Roma on a free. The Nigerian defender Taye Taiwo, who has left Marseille on a free transfer, could well start the season as Milan's left-back. Business so far: 8/10
    Internazionale: A worryingly quiet summer at the 2010 treble winners so far. Last season was a mess with the managers Rafael Benítez and Leonardo coming and going and it was a surprise to see the club finish second in the league despite all the upheavals. The Milan club have, admittedly, signed the winger Ricky Alvarez from Vélez Sarsfield for nearly €12m under the noses of Arsenal but names such as Jonathan (Santos, €5m), Emiliano Viviano (Bologna, €4.1m), Yuto Nagatomo (permanent from Cesena, €4.7m) and Luc Castaignos (Feyenoord, €3m) will not strike fear into the rest of Europe, nor the rest of Serie A for that matter. Business so far: 4/10
    Juventus: Exciting times at the Juventus Arena (the club's new stadium, to be opened in September) after a couple of lean years, poor managerial appointments and even poorer signings (Diego for €24.5m anyone?). The powerful striker Mirko Vucinic has joined from Roma in a deal worth €15m. The Chile international Arturo Vidal was wanted by several otherclubs but chose Turin in a €10.5m deal and will be joined in a revamped midfield by Andrea Pirlo, the Milan legend who has left San Siro after 10 seasons and more than 300 league games for the Rossoneri. And he is actually only 32 years old. The Swiss defender Stephan Lichtsteiner was expensive at roughly €10m from Lazio but could work well at right-back while Spurs fans may shudder at the thought of Reto Ziegler at left-back but the Swiss has had a few good seasons at Sampdoria (who were, er, relegated last season). Alessandro Matri, Fabio Quagliarella, Marco Motta and Simone Pepe have all made their deals permanent. Business so far: 9/10
    [h=2]Germany[/h]Bayern Munich: ast season's third place has sparked a small revolution. Jupp Heynckes is back for his third – and probably last – spell as manager and the marquee signing is Manuel Neuer, the Schalke goalkeeper who has joined for €22m despite the protests of Bayern fans, incensed by his criticism of the club in previous years. The signing of the former Schalke right-back Rafinha from Genoa for €5.5m is somewhat baffling whereas paying €13.5m for Manchester City's Jérôme Boateng makes more sense, the defender having played for Hertha Berlin and Hamburg in the Bundesliga from 2007 to 2010. Dale Jennings, of course, has joined from Tranmere but is unlikely to see much first-team action this season. Business so far: 8/10
    Borussia Dortmund: The German champions may struggle in the Champions League unless they strengthen their squad. The 44-year-old manager, Jürgen Klopp, did a superb job with his players last season and won the league by seven points ahead of Bayer Leverkusen but has lost Nuri Sahin to Real Madrid and his youngsters may struggle with the added expectation that comes with being champions. The Croat Ivan Perisic (22) has been brought in to replace Sahin but is a gamble at €5.5m from Club Brugge (where he scored 22 league goals to win the Belgian Golden Boot last season). The talented Germany Under-21 midfielder Ilkay Gundogan, who had been monitored by Manchester United, has also joined, from Nürnberg. It is an admirable belief in youth and the Dortmund project will be interesting to follow. Business so far: 4/10

 
[h=2]France[/h]Paris Saint-Germain: Qatar Sports Investments now owns 70% of the club and PSG are finally hoping to end their 17-year wait for the league title. "We will work over the coming years to make PSG a great team and a strong brand on the international scene, one that will make all the fans proud," the QSI president, Nasser al-Khelaifi, said after completing the purchase. And the coach, Antoine Kombouaré, suddenly has an extraordinary depth of talent at his disposal, with a €40m deal for Palermo's Javier Pastore expected to be announced this week. Already signed are the French international striker Kevin Gameiro (from Lorient for €11m), the midfielder Blaise Matuidi from Saint-Etienne (also a French international) for €10m and the former Liverpool midfielder Mohamed Sissoko from Juventus. Jérémy Ménez (Roma) and Milan Bisevac (Valenciennes) have also been added, as has the Italy international goalkeeper Salvatore Sirigu. They are the Man City of France and few teams will fancy coming up against the brute force and energy of a Matuidi-Sissoko partnership in central midfield. Business so far: 9/10
Lyon: Remarkably, the club who won the French league for seven consecutive seasons up until 2008, have not signed anyone and may not do so either. There has been interest in Delvin N'Dinga from Auxerre but the president, Jean-Michel Aulas, has said that fans should not expect too much this summer: "When we sign expensive players, they say that we take a lot of risks and they might not pay off. Here we have decided to play the youth card. We have six young players who will play in the Under-20 World Cup and three good players who are injured at the moment," he said. The coach, Rémi Garde, once of Arsenal, clearly has to build for the future. Business so far: 0/10
[h=2]Other major transfers[/h]Danilo (right-back/midfielder, Br) from Santos to Porto for €13m (will join in January 2012)
Erik Lamela (midfielder, Arg) from River Plate to Roma for €12m
Domenico Criscito (defender, It) from Genoa to Zenit St Petersburg for €12m
Bojan Krkic (forward, Sp) from Barcelona to Roma for €12m
Alex Sandro (left-back, Br) from Deportivo Maldonaldo to Porto for €9.6m
Emmanuel Emenike (striker, Nig) from Fenerbahce to Spartak Moscow for €10m
Christian Träsch (midfielder, Ger) from Stuttgart to Wolfsburg for €9m
Dimitri Payet (winger, Fr) from St-Etienne to Lille for €9m
Dries Mertens (forward, Bel) from Utrecht to PSV Eindhoven for €8.5m
Demy de Zeeuw (midfielder, Neth) from Ajax to Spartak Moscow for €7m
Fernando Muslera (keeper, Uru) from Lazio to Galatasaray for €6.8m
Maarten Stekelenburg (goalkeeper, Neth) from Ajax to Roma for €6m
Djibril Cissé (forward, Fr) from Panathinaikos to Lazio for €5.8m
Alou Diarra (midfielder, Fr) from Bordeaux to Marseille for €5m
Nemanja Matic (midfielder, Ser) from Chelsea to Benfica for €5m
Felipe Melo (midfielder, Br) from Juventus to Galatasaray on loan
[h=2]Familiar faces[/h]Some of the joy of a transfer window, however, is finding out where your club's former left-back has ended up or what happened to that hapless midfielder you always knew was a bad buy. Well, two former Tottenham players have been on the move this summer with all 6ft 3in of Noé Pamarot joining Granada, newcomers in La Liga, from Hércules and Didier Zokora fetching a fee believed to be €5m when moving from Sevilla to Trabzonspor.
Former Chelsea players have also changed clubs with Tiago Mendes making his loan move from Juventus to Atlético Madrid permanent while Adrian Mutu has, remarkably, convinced Cesena to take a punt on him. The Israeli forward Ben Sahar has gone on loan to Auxerre from Espanyol. The former Manchester United defender Gabriel Heinze has moved to Roma from Marseille on a free transfer (he's not that old actually: just 33), while Bébé is out on loan at Besiktas.
There are a lot of former Manchester City players out there. Felipe Caicedo first joined Levante for €1m, only to then to be given permission to travel to Russia and agree a deal with Lokomotiv Moscow, with the Spanish club making a tidy profit of €6m (which could rise to €9m with add-ons). Meanwhile Sporting have signed Valeri Bojinov on a five-year deal from Parma for a fee of €2.7m rising to a potential €3.7m.
Sporting have also signed Oguchi Onyewu (once of Newcastle) on a free transfer from Milan. Another former Magpies defender, David Rozehnal,has made his move from Hamburg to French champions Lille permanent.
The great hope of the Gérard Houllier era at Anfield, Florent Sinama-Pongolle, has moved to St Etienne on loan from Sporting (his sidekick Anthony Le Tallec is with Auxerre since 2010). Jérémie Aliadière, who never made it at Arsenal but had a decent career at Middlesbrough, has joined Lorient as a free agent. Other former Boro players on the move: Kris Boyd (to Eskisehirspor in Turkey) and Didier Digard (to Nice for €800,000).
The former Wigan defender Andreas Granqvist has cost as much as €4.5m when joining Genoa from Groningen while Daniel de Ridder has moved to Grasshoppers in Switzerland on a free.
The ex-Bolton striker Johan Elmander has joined Galatasaray to team up with Milan Baros while Jozy Altidore (who netted once in 28 league games for Hull while on loan in 2009-10) will play for AZ Alkmaar in the Dutch league next season.
This season we will also find out whether Abdoulaye Méïté will cut the mustard at Dijon (sorry), promoted to Ligue 1 for the first time ever. Manuel Fernandes, the young midfielder who showed promise but never kicked on at Everton or Portsmouth, has made his move from Valencia to Besiktas permanent for a fee of €2m.
And finally, Miroslav Klose has joined Lazio on a free. Torsten Frings turned down a move to Elland Road to join Toronto FC, where he will, we are sure, be delighted to team up with Richard Eckersley, formerly of Manchester United and now on loan in Canada from Burnley. Sidney Govou has moved to Evian from Panathinaikos on a free transfer while Gerald Sibon (yes, the Gerald Sibon) is back in the Netherlands with Heerenveen after leaving Melbourne Heart.
One player not on the move is Eric Djemba-Djemba, who is expected to stay with OB in Denmark.
 
[h=1]Premier League preview No5: Chelsea[/h] André Villas-Boas knows he is under pressure at Stamford Bridge



  • Amy Lawrence and Paul Doyle discuss Chelsea's prospects for next season. Link to this video Guardian writers' prediction: 3rd (This is not Dominic Fifield's prediction, but the average of our writers' tips)
    Last season's position: 2nd
    Odds to win the league: 5-2
    It was Marcel Desailly who summed up the task awaiting André Villas-Boas most succinctly. "All the pressure is on the shoulders of the coach," said the former Chelsea captain. "It's all up to him." The Portuguese, at 33, returned to Stamford Bridge this summer with only 20 months of managerial experience behind him, charged with succeeding where it had been deemed a recent Double-winning coach had failed. It says much for Villas-Boas's innate self-belief that he has plunged himself into his new role with relish.
    The rookie with the record – the Europa League, the domestic league title at a canter and a Portuguese Cup were all claimed in his solitary campaign at Porto – will not escape the focus as Chelsea's Premier League campaign begins, but the pressure associated with his new role will be embraced. Villas-Boas, a manager who has soaked up knowledge imparted by Sir Bobby Robson, Pep Guardiola and José Mourinho, has only ever been successful. He has never tasted anything else. He may preach the power of the collective, but his is an entrenched belief that his own footballing philosophy can revive this team.
    In truth, it has to. Villas-Boas is the single factor at present upon which Chelsea can pin their hopes of transforming last season's relative underachievers into title winners and European contenders again. The club will attempt to be active in the transfer market before the end of the month, and much may depend upon the success of their pursuit of Tottenham Hotspur's playmaker Luka Modric, but, at present, this is a playing staff that is settled and familiar. Short-termism in the dugout has led to virtual inertia when it comes to overhauling the squad. They will essentially rely on the same names, trying to tap into the same strengths, but are therefore also susceptible to the same weaknesses.
    These players have earned lofty reputations, but they are also a group who have claimed the Premier League only once since Mourinho's second campaign at the club, and who rather faded as challengers for the Champions League under Carlo Ancelotti. Last term's dismal mid-season slump came as a profound shock, with the Italian never recovering from his inability to arrest the decline until the real damage had been done. Roman Abramovich does not put up with failure, and the management's rather perplexed reaction to the crisis was never likely to be tolerated. Elimination from Europe merely sealed Ancelotti's fate.
    Those same players remain, which makes concerns over a repeat inevitable. Logic suggested this summer was an opportunity to revamp, that the new manager might seek to restructure and refresh. Instead, he has chosen to maintain the faith or, perhaps more realistically, recognised the practicalities which hamper Chelsea's attempts to reinvent. Senior players are on considerable wages, limiting the number of suitors capable of luring them away.
    Anzhi Makhachkala taking Yuri Zhirkov back to Russia is the exception – he will be returning home to a money-flushed club able to pay his wages. Others, like José Bosingwa and Paulo Ferreira, cannot be moved on. Nicolas Anelka, too, has opted to see out the final year of his contract and leave for nothing next summer rather than transferring now. The Premier League's 25-man squad rule, and a reluctance to stockpile players who cannot be utilised, has set the club's policy: the lavish spending, to date, was limited to January.
    Yet Villas-Boas returned from the club's four-match tour of the far east this week glowing at the quality already at his disposal. His satisfaction was not an act. There had been visible signs of progress through those distant pre-season preparations, with players growing both in terms of physical fitness – which would be expected – and in assuredness at the systems and style the management wish to pursue. They spoke of feeling "liberated", revelling in training sessions that concentrated more on ballwork aimed at promoting a fluid, attacking approach on the pitch. These are simple principles and they will be tested in the Premier League, particularly if injuries bite as they did last year, but Villas-Boas and his staff believe they hit upon a balance at Porto that can be implemented in London to eke out something extra.
    The tour provided evidence that his techniques, combined with the players' desire to impress, are working. Pre-season only offers hints for what lies ahead, but there was plenty to encourage. Didier Drogba was at his brutish best. Frank Lampard adapted well to the right-sided role in a narrow midfield he might have to occupy if Modric is signed, and even to deeper-lying duties. Branislav Ivanovic appeared a natural partner for John Terry at centre-half, all power on the turf and aggression in the air. Yossi Benayoun offered subtlety and creation, qualities missing for long periods last season. Florent Malouda rediscovered the menace and whip in his delivery. Even Fernando Torres managed a goal and flashes of his old Liverpool self in the Barclays Asia Trophy final victory over Aston Villa. If those seniors maintain form and fitness, Chelsea can still flourish.
    The team has flitted smoothly through variations in systems and tactics, from a conventional 4-3-3 to a diamond midfield and even a 4-2-3-1, which should suit Torres most of all. Then there has been the considerable impact of the squad's younger talents, most notably Josh McEachran in midfield and Daniel Sturridge up front. Villas-Boas has high hopes, too, for the teenager Oriol Romeu, en route from Barcelona B, who he sees as capable of thriving in the defensive midfield berth. The Spaniard could potentially move the ball on quicker than Mikel John Obi to maintain an upbeat tempo. Michael Essien's long-term knee injury is a blow, but throw in both Ramires and David Luiz, neither of whom were present in Asia but are both capable of sitting effectively at the base of midfield if required, and there are options for the Portuguese to pursue.
    The addition of a playmaker could yet be key, and the catalyst to Torres justifying his value in the months ahead, and coaxing performances from the Spaniard will be essential if Villas-Boas's tenure is to be judged successful. On one level, this club simply cannot afford to endure the embarrassment of being saddled with another Andriy Shevchenko – Torres, at 27 and already used to the rigours of the Premier League, should not suffer the same fate – but, on another, if the World Cup winner performs then Chelsea boast a weapon few can rival. Villas-Boas can simply add that to his list of issues to address but, as a manager who has never endured failure, he will not be daunted.

 
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[h=1]Newcastle give squad legal warning over Twitter after Joey Barton row[/h] • Players banned from tweeting about club affairs
• Alan Pardew offers Newcastle lifeline to Barton




  • Louise Taylor
  • guardian.co.uk, Thursday 4 August 2011 22.00 BST Article history
    Joey-Barton-arrives-at-Ne-007.jpg
    Joey Barton's Newcastle career may not be over after all, provided he 'pulls in the same direction' as the rest of the squad. Photograph: Owen Humphreys/PA

    Joey Barton has been offered an olive branch by Newcastle United but a potential truce comes at a price. The midfielder has received a lawyer's letter informing him that he will be in breach of contract if he uses his Twitter account to comment on club affairs in future.
    Like every other Newcastle player, Barton has been issued with new, strict guidelines for Twitter usage, prohibiting any revelation of "privileged" information that may offer opponents an advantage or undermine colleagues. Potential sanctions include fines, suspensions and, ultimately, sackings.
    "The problem I have with this new medium of Twitter is that people are twittering in an emotional state," Alan Pardew, the Newcastle manager, said. "Putting something out instantly can be very, very, damaging. Not only to a football club but to any organisation and it could be to the police too, which I've seen on occasion."
    Outraged not only by Barton's tweeted criticisms of the club's spending policy – which led to the 28-year-old being made available on a free transfer – but similar gripes expressed by José Enrique, Newcastle's left-back, via the same medium, Pardew sought counsel from his Manchester United counterpart.
    "I spoke to Sir Alex Ferguson, and United's policy is that nobody at their club can comment about the football club [on Twitter]," he said. "It's in breach of contract if you are criticising the owner, the masseur, a player, anyone at the football club ... Giving out injury news, that causes problems too."
    Reassured by Ferguson's stance, Pardew consulted the St James' Park lawyers as they put the final touches to a letter distributed to every squad member, similarly restricting their tweeting scope.
    "We've notified the players this morning," Newcastle's manager said. "They've probably seen it as another sort of dictatorial moment from us but we've had to issue them legally with a letter to say this is not right, it's a breach of contract and you have to understand you're going to be fined and disciplined for that. It can't happen. Sir Alex shared with me quite ferociously how difficult this Twitter issue is for clubs, particularly managers."
    Manchester United are one of number of clubs who have, so far at least, passed up on the opportunity to sign Barton. Though the midfielder may still depart before the transfer deadline, the lack of takers means he and Newcastle may be stuck with each other. "Joey will dictate what happens because he's got another year on his contract here," said Pardew, who was left furious after a show of dissent from Barton at last Sunday's friendly defeat by Leeds. "Joey will decide. But if he wants to stay then he has to pull in the same direction as us. I've made that clear to him and, at the moment, we're in a period of reflection."
    This involves time apart from the first-team squad. Barton, who trained alone on Tuesday, worked out with the reserves on Thursday and will play no part in Saturday's friendly at home to Fiorentina.
    "Everybody was very angry this week and there were decisions on both sides that were made with that anger still at the surface," Pardew said. "But I cannot and will not run a football team where a player isn't pulling for the team. It was evident that whatever happened with Joey's mind affected the team. I can't accept that."
    Pardew concedes the incident has exerted a toll on dressing-room camaraderie. "No, I'm not happy with it," he said. "It hasn't been the most perfect pre-season. I don't think Newcastle United are in chaos but are we having a difficult week? Yes. Do we need to get our fans into a better place? Yes. Does the team need to improve on the pitch? Yes."
    He hopes to strengthen his Newcastle side by making a couple of signings. Negotiations are continuing with Bayer Leverkusen for the 26-year-old Switzerland international Tranquillo Barnetta, who excels in Barton's optimal right-wing position.
    "The problem I've got with the group at the moment is that they want to see one or two players coming through the door," said Pardew, who confirmed he had received "no bids" for José Enrique. "I'm making it very, very clear to Derek and Mike [Llambias and Ashley, Newcastle's managing director and owner] that we need one or two boys in this door. Now."

 

[h=1] [/h]

[h=1]Chelsea's new signing Oriol Romeu has 'the greatest potential'[/h] If he fulfils his rich promise, Barcelona B's 19-year-old midfielder could turn out to be the bargain of the season for Chelsea



Oriol-Romeu-playing-for-B-007.jpg
Spain's Under-21 manager, Luis Milla, describes Oriol Romeu as 'a necessary component in any football team'. Photograph: Giuliano Bevilacqua/Rex Features

Oriol Romeu made his last appearance for FC Barcelona in the final seven minutes of the penultimate week of the 2010-2011 Spanish season. With the league title wrapped up and a policy of protectionism installed as the Champions League final approached, Pep Guardiola turned to a less familiar line-up. Less familiar, that is, to the fans: Guardiola knew them all inside out and this was not an empty gesture, nor the choices coincidental. Barcelona's first team were handed the league trophy; many of Barcelona's second team were handed their own reward.
The young defender Marc Bartra, part of the Barcelona B team that had just finished third in Spain's second division but had been denied the chance to battle for promotion because of the presence of the first team in the division above, described it as an unexpected bonus, "a spectacular prize". Barcelona drew 0-0 with Deportivo La Coruña but that hardly mattered. "Playing for the best team in the world is a gift and a great opportunity," he said. Most would agree, one newspaper calling it "a song of praise to La Masía", the spiritual home of Barcelona's youth system.
Most, but not all. Bartra's Barça B team-mate Oriol Romeu had mixed emotions. For him, seven minutes was reward after a long knee injury, and the opportunity was welcome. But in truth, seven minutes did not feel like much.
Romeu began the season as the deep-lying midfielder in the traditional curtain-raiser, the Spanish Super Cup, against Sevilla at the Sánchez Pizjuán. It was 15 August, he was 18 and, post-World Cup, Barcelona's normal first-teamers were not yet fully ready. There was no Busquets, no Xavi, no Iniesta and no Valdés; no Villa, Piqué or Puyol and no Messi either. Sergi Gómez, also 18, joined Romeu in the side. Jonathan dos Santos was included too. And the goalkeeper was Rubén Miño. Barcelona lost 3-1 and the scoreline was, in Pep Guardiola's words, "a heavy price to pay, considering how the game went".
Romeu, in particular, had impressed as the deepest of the midfielders: quick and well positioned in front of the defence, using the ball swiftly and simply, mature and unflustered. In the second half, Sevilla introduced Fredi Kanouté and stormed back, an aggressive, high-intensity game paying off. But Barcelona's control in the opening 45 minutes, with Romeu in the middle of it, had been extraordinary.
It was supposed to be the beginning of many appearances in Barcelona's first team. Romeu still had to develop, to complete the stages upon which Guardiola insists, but he was promised that he would spend much of the campaign alternating between Barça B and the first-team squad. He was the natural back-up for Sergio Busquets and Barcelona had noted that there was little need to chase a replacement for Yaya Touré, recently departed for Manchester City. Romeu, who had joined Barça from local rivals Espanyol in 2004, was that player: muscular back-up for a team of tiny technicians.
Two weeks later, with a day left in the summer transfer window, and having given up on Cesc Fábregas, Barcelona signed Javier Mascherano. Romeu did not return to the first team until those final seven minutes against Deportivo.
A torn meniscus at the start of January curtailed his progression still further but his hopes of more opportunities had already been unfulfilled. Until then, he had none. Naturally enough, after recovery later in the season he would not have any either. Instead, he continued in the B team where he had played such a central role in promotion the previous year. English clubs, Stoke among them, had expressed an interest. When Chelsea offered him the chance to play first team football on first-team wages, he hardly had to think twice. "Were it not for [formally having first-team registration], he wouldn't have departed," a member of his camp told El País.
As for Barcelona, conscious of the bottleneck at the entrance to the first team, they were happy for him to depart – London could prove the perfect finishing school, an opportunity denied in Catalunya. Gerard Piqué provides the prototype, even if "prototype" suggests rather more forethought from the club than is really the case. It was not that Guardiola did not rate Romeu, but that others stood in his way. Romeu cost Chelsea €5m (£4.35m). For the first two seasons, Barcelona have a buy-back option – €10m in the first season, €15m in the second.
Bigger and stronger than most of his Barcelona team-mates at 6ft 1in and 13 stone, Romeu is the least "Barça" of the Barça midfielders. Physical, well positioned, tactically bright but less precise in his passing, less rapid, less smooth, in possession. Luis Enrique, his coach for Barça B, notes his attitude and presence rather than his eye for a pass.
As Martí Perarnau, the most diligent observer of Barcelona's youth set-up puts it: "Oriol is solidario. He never abandons his team-mates. He reaches every corner and covers every gap. He gives balance in the middle, allowing the rest to construct with freedom, and he goes into challenges strongly and decisively. He enjoys winning the ball back and pressuring the opposition. Sometimes, though, he is hasty in the transition of the ball."
A European champion with Spain at Under-17 level in 2008, a runner-up at Under-19 level last year and currently playing in Colombia with Spain's Under-20s, he is described by the Spain Under-21 manager, Luis Milla, as a player who "is always well positioned, tactically". Romeu, he adds, "uses the ball correctly in possession and always does the simple thing. He is a necessary component in any football team." André Villas-Boas certainly thinks so. "Romeu," he says, "is one of the midfielders with the greatest potential there is. He has a brilliant future."
This article has been amended since first publication
 
[h=1]Sir Alex Ferguson says Manchester United will not be 'complacent'[/h] • United face City in Community Shield
• Manager says City spending is a 'challenge'




  • Press Association
  • guardian.co.uk, Friday 5 August 2011 15.10 BST Article history
    Alex-Ferguson-007.jpg
    The Manchester United manager, Sir Alex Ferguson, welcomes the challenge presented by Manchester City. Photograph: Paul Ellis/AFP/Getty Images

    Sir Alex Ferguson has said that he welcomes the challenge of the big-spending Manchester City, because it will prevent his club becoming complacent.
    The Manchester United manager believes that City may add to their squad before the transfer window closes – he has previously stated that he expects Samir Nasri to move to Eastlands from Arsenal – and that United have proved before that they can cope with the arrival of super-rich competitors.
    Roberto Mancini's City will be United's opponents in the Community Shield on Sunday, but Ferguson said United would see the game as just another part of their pre-season preparations. The last time the clubs met at Wembley was in April, when City won an FA Cup semi-final.
    Ferguson said: "Because of the particular facet of the club that they have the money to spend, I thought maybe they would spend more this summer and that may still happen, they may still sign a couple more players. We get this almost every year when clubs round about us buy, and that's how you view the importance of winning the league these days.
    "Chelsea had this great spell of buying when José [Mourinho] first went there and we accepted that challenge. It's good to accept challenges, it keeps the complacency away from your door and we carry on as best as we can."
    In terms of the Community Shield, Ferguson's selection is likely to be based around planning for the start of the Premier League season a week later. The manager told a news conference at United's training ground: "I have always viewed the Community Shield as a stepping stone to the first game of the season. It's very easy to get emotional about this type of game but I don't think we will be changing our policy. There may be two or three players who need the game on Sunday."
    Ferguson said that Michael Carrick was likely to miss the game, after picking up a slight achilles problem in the retired goalkeeper Edwin van der Sar's testimonial match on Wednesday. Darren Fletcher, Antonio Valencia and Rafael da Silva are all back in training. Ferguson said that the young Mexican striker Javier Hernández would miss the start of the Premier League season as a precaution, after he suffered from a concussion last month.
    Ferguson said: "Chicharito won't be involved for maybe another two or three weeks. Considering he had a concussion some years ago, we are just playing safe with that. But he should be back by the end of August."
    Ferguson also paid tribute to Paul Scholes, describing the midfielder as one of United's greatest players. Scholes retired at the end of the last season, at the age of 36, and United will play a testimonial match for him on Friday night, against the New York Cosmos at Old Trafford.
    Ferguson said: "To my mind he will go down as one of the greatest players of all time for Manchester United. I was with [the former United and France goalkeeper] Fabien Barthez on Wednesday having a chat and he said: 'Pass my regards on to Scholesy, he's the best player I ever played with.' You see [Barcelona's] Xavi talking about Scholes, and he's in a better position than most of us to talk about midfield players, saying he's the best player he has every played against."
    Ferguson joked that the notoriously publicity-shy Scholes would not enjoy being in the spotlight. He said: "He might not turn up – if an interview is involved he won't, he will be quite happy with his slippers on! He will endure it. If he has to do an interview or something with the fans at the end of the game he will get through it somehow but he will not be looking forward to it."

 
[h=1]Football transfer rumours: Joe Cole to Paris St-Germain?[/h] Today's tell-all is feeling the burn ...



  • Alan Gardner
  • guardian.co.uk, Friday 5 August 2011 09.19 BST Article history
    Joe-Cole-006.jpg
    Joe Cole struggles to even do a push-up these days, but that won't put off Paris St-Germain. Photograph: Paul Ellis/AFP/Getty Images

    The Mill's social network of choice, as you can probably imagine, consists of a few like-minded fellows who collect around the back of the local offie to share a flagon of Fermented Apple Elixir and discuss the price of fish fingers. We've had a go on the Twitters but decided that while there may be one or two characters on there, 140 seemed to be overstating the case. So, you'll forgive us for being behind the curve on the football-digital media crossover story de nos jours: Kevin Davies is off Twitter #allrightheactuallyquititinmay.
    "It is difficult to have an opinion when you are high-profile," said Davies, who could probably do us all a favour by pointing that out to Robbie Savage. "I am man enough to take a bit of stick but I was constantly having to worry about what I was saying and justifying my performance or a missed chance. Twitter is a very addictive thing. I didn't want to sit at home thinking what can I put on there. It is not the way I live. I have a normal life. I would rather spend time with my kids and doing stuff at home rather than checking my Twitter all the time."
    Sadly, that is still the way several freedom-of-speech-minded Newcastle players live (mentioning no names, "Assange" Barton), leading Alan Pardew to dig up the lawyers and let them loose with their red pens and caveats and ABSOLUTELY NO SENSE OF FUN. Expect tweet silence to rein at St James' Park for about as long as it takes to impulsively bash out the views of Descartes on the sign and the signifier.
    To the transfermarkt, then, where someone has finally pointed out to Kenny Dalglish that he has about eleventy-twelve midfielders too many in his squad. That may not be the only reason Liverpool would welcome Paris St-Germain's interest in Joe Cole – who earns a modest crust to keep the physio's treatment table warm – and with the Qatar-backed French side throwing around money like Richard Pryor in Brewster's Millions they'll barely notice Cole's inverse wages to impact ratio, let alone the medical bills.
    Will Carlos Tevez do one to Inter? If the Italians are willing to bubble-wrap Samuel Eto'o and pack him off to Manchester City on the next Alitalia flight, he can. And Manchester United are still in for Inter's Wesley Sneijder – they've turned over a giant egg timer that will count down to the two-week deadline the Dutch midfielder has been given to decide on whether he wants to be the new Paul Scholes. Sorry, play in roughly the same part of the pitch as Scholes used to occupy.
    If Stan Kroenke loves Cesc Fábregas, he will set him free. But Stan Kroenke almost certainly has a higher regard for the balance sheet than moping Spanish midfielders – so even though Arsenal's American majority shareholder has blazed into town on horseback to settle Fábregas's future once and for all, don't expect him to sell to those varmints from Barcelona for anything less than a wagon full of gold bullion and the keys to La Masía (aka: you've not heard to last of this one for a while yet. No, really).
    Chelsea manager André Villas-Boas is willing to leave Fernando Torres on the bench for the start of the season. Which seems pretty sound logic, to the Mill.
    Real Madrid winger Pedro Léon is being lined up to wear gloves and a snood at Everton, Aston Villa or Fulham next season. And Newcastle fancy asking Manchester United's Gabriel Obertan to stand out on the flank blowing hot air into his cupped hands and generally looking lost – though they may want to reconsider when they realise how attached he is to his mobile phone. Jinking widemen are all the rage at the moment, with Bolton eyeing up Shaun Wright-Phillips (possibly through a magnifying glass). Naturally, they're only willing to pay a small fee.
    Owen Coyle is also being linked with a move for Liverpool striker David Ngog, though he doesn't want to stump up £4.5m in order to secure his John Hancock. But if it's silly money you're after, West Ham are your team – they've submitted bids for Ngog, as well as Andy Johnson and Nicky Maynard. Bristol City want £4m for Maynard, double the Irons' initial offer, and if they get it, the chances are that Shane Long will escape the clutches of Sam Allardyce and scamper off to live with Roy Hodgson at the Hawthorns. At £7m, Long would be a bargain at half the price. Though obviously most things would be a bargain at half the price.
    And finally, Steve Buscemi is playing his violin for Ian Holloway, who has been twiddling his thumbs all summer, waiting for the return of Jeff, Jamie, Graham and Co: "You would not believe the chasm that's left when the Premier League goes away. The excitement, the tension, even just looking forward to the games. That's not there any more. The honest truth is that I've had a few weeks of soul-searching. It has been the worst few months of my life, to be honest. It was heartbreaking."
    Don't worry, Ian, only one more week to go! What's that ... Oh, er, yeah. But the Championship's OK too, right?

 
[h=1]Premier League preview No10: Manchester United[/h] Sir Alex Ferguson's may have a squad ready to retain the league title but a bigger challenge awaits in Europe



  • Link to this video Guardian writers' prediction 1st (This is not Daniel Taylor's prediction, but the average of our writers' tips)
    Last season's position 1st
    Odds on winning title 7-4
    We will probably know more by the end of the month, when the transfer window clanks shut and the full extent of Manchester United's ambition is there for everyone to see, but for now there are probably two ways of looking at the club's summer business.
    One is that the champions have assembled a squad that, once again, may have the right blend of wit and knowhow to win the league. They finished nine points clear last season, they know the processes involved and there are not too many people who would have predicted, by the first week of August, that the Glazer family had spent roughly the same on transfers as Sheikh Mansour bin Zayed al-Nahyan, sitting on a tenth of the planet's oil reserves, had with Manchester City.
    But it is when you look at the wider issue, where the club would like to be and, specifically, the inability to bring in the penetrative, attacking, central midfielder that can take this team to a new level again, that it is tempting to wonder whether this is also shaping up to be the summer when the greatest challenge remaining for Ferguson just got even harder.
    That challenge is to catch and overhaul Barcelona and spare themselves any more of the ordeals witnessed in the Stadio Olimpico in 2009 and, again, at Wembley last May, when television close-ups showed Ferguson in a way he had rarely been seen before. He looked flat, devoid of words, as if he had run out of things to say, zapped of the usual energy. Ferguson leant back in his seat, folded his arms and stared ahead in quiet contemplation as United suffered death by a thousand cuts. Or to be more precise, 777 passes. Almost 150 from Xavi, naturally.
    As Ferguson has said, there is no reason to be ashamed if it is United's lot to be thought of as the second-best club side on Earth, particularly when they go into the season with authentic aspirations of winning a 20th title and enhancing their position as the most successful league team in England.
    The problem for a club of United's size is that they should always be looking for vast rather than marginal improvement and, unless something changes, the various knockbacks for Samir Nasri and Wesley Sneijder are threatening to thwart real, significant progress. Barcelona, already the doyens of the fast, slick, pass-them-to-death football to which United aspire, have signed Alexis Sánchez and are greedily in the process of adding Cesc Fábregas. A team that put five past Real Madrid last season just got even better, whereas the paradox about United's near £50m outlay is that a legitimate case could be made that their first-choice XI is not, in fact, any stronger at all.
    It is a strange set of circumstances because this has been a rare summer of spending under what United's supporters have come to know as Glazernomics, with a mere £14.5m (net) going on transfers in the six previous seasons. Yet Phil Jones, signed from Blackburn Rovers for £16m, is really a player for the future while Ashley Young, lured from Aston Villa for £14m, will presumably start the season as back-up for Nani. Then there is David de Gea, signed from Atlético Madrid for £18.3m to challenge Anders Lindegaard for the right to be known as United's first-choice goalkeeper but so young, three months short of turning 21, it would be unreasonable to expect the same control and authority as the now-retired Edwin van der Sar had.
    De Gea has looked a little hesitant at times in pre-season – nothing too serious but enough to be noticed – and will inevitably make a few mistakes. The important thing is how he reacts because it is his form, replacing a man twice his age, that will probably matter more than any other player's when it comes to determining whether the championship trophy remains at Old Trafford.
    It constitutes a lot of pressure for a 20-year-old embarking on a new life, in a new country with a new language, and Ferguson may think there are benefits in starting the more experienced Lindegaard when the manager's 25th anniversary season begins at West Bromwich Albion on Sunday week. Lindegaard was one of the players who stood out on the club's summer tour of the United States. De Gea, however, will play in the Community Shield against Manchester City on Sunday.
    The squad is not without its flaws and, as Barcelona demonstrated so ruthlessly, still at least one level shy of greatness. Wayne Rooney, however, should be less erratic, free of the turmoil that surrounded him for the first few months of the previous campaign. Javier Hernández has had a year to learn about English football, passing all tests with distinction. Dimitar Berbatov may not be selected for enough games to emulate his 20-goal haul of last season, but the early evidence is that he has not suffered the mental fragility that many anticipated after the Champions League final. Danny Welbeck, returning from a loan arrangement at Sunderland, is a year older and wiser. Rio Ferdinand remains susceptible to injury but there is plenty of back-up in the form of Chris Smalling and Jones, while Jonny Evans is young enough at 23 to be considered a player who has had a blip rather than one in decline.
    Ferguson is certainly not short of options, with seven different strikers and five centre-halves. The problem, in short, lies in between. However you jumble the names it is difficult to pick any permutation of four United midfielders and think of it as a quartet that can form the basis of a Champions League-winning side.
    Michael Carrick turned 30 last week and maybe this is the time when he starts to exert more influence. Except we have been saying that about Carrick for some time now. One suspects he will always be that stylish passer who never quite had it within himself to dictate big matches. Too often he plays the ball and stays still, whereas the best players in his position, such as Xavi and Iniesta and Fábregas, give and go, release then move, always looking for the return pass.
    United otherwise have surprisingly few players with the ability to prise open opposition defences, especially now Ryan Giggs is heading towards his 38th birthday and has to be used more sparingly. Tom Cleverley, according to Ferguson, is a "strong possibility", but we have heard United's manager say this sort of thing before, often to encourage a player before a long spell on the edges.
    What United really need is someone with control and sophistication, the ability to make the killer pass and the quality that Ferguson cherishes most in a midfielder: penetration. Darren Fletcher, for all his influence, is not that man, and continues to be troubled with health issues. Darron Gibson has become the player the Old Trafford crowd dislike the most and should probably try to rekindle a transfer before it descends into voluble dissent. Paul Pogba and Ravel Morrison, from the FA Youth Cup-winning team, have rare talents, but this may be one season too early for them. United, in hindsight, missed a trick last summer. David Silva, then of Valencia and now of Manchester City, would have ticked every box.
    Instead, the United chief executive, David Gill, submitted an offer for Arsenal's Samir Nasri in June, in the knowledge it would almost certainly be repelled. His fears were proven correct. Arsenal not only rejected it out of hand but did not deem it worthy of an official reply. United have not entirely given up but, remembering their own opposition when Gabriel Heinze tried and failed to defect to Liverpool in 2007, they appreciate Arsenal's position.
    For now, Ferguson's thoughts are more prominently with Wesley Sneijder, even though it would mean breaking the club's policy of not spending big money on players who are 26 or above, on the basis that all new signings should have a resale value. Sneijder is available from Internazionale but turned 27 in June and, as such, not everyone at Old Trafford is convinced a move for him makes financial sense. The player, in turn, has not been offered the salary he wants and Ferguson sounded noticeably impatient when he confided to one ally last weekend that "if he [Sneijder] wants to come, he must accept our contract offer. If not, we have other options in mind. We're done talking."
    The alternative is a team that can win the league but seem no closer, and possibly even further away, to giving Barcelona a more credible challenge. Sneijder alone would not bridge the gulf but it would be a start and, for that alone, the next few weeks should tell us a lot more about United, the Glazer family and the scale of their ambitions.

 
[h=1]Premier League preview No 9: Manchester City[/h] Can Roberto Mancini's expensively assembled team knock Manchester United off their perch?


Paul Doyle and Amy Lawrence discuss Manchester City's prospects for the coming season. Link to this video Guardian writers' prediction 2nd (This is not Daniel Taylor's prediction, but the average of our writers' tips)
Last season's position 3rd
Odds to win the league 7-2
When everything is said and done, it all boils down to one thing for Manchester City this season and it is this: can they go that one step further? Can they turn all that drive, ambition, hard spending and unrelenting momentum into something more serious and, finger by finger, prise Sir Alex Ferguson's grip off the Premier League trophy?
There were nine points between them last season so it would take a fairly hefty swing, but there is certainly good reason to believe there may be less distance between the two Manchester clubs this time around. City were top of the league last Christmas and eventually finished third, their highest finish since 1977. Ferguson, by his own admission, has been forced to take them more seriously than any other point in almost a quarter of a century at Old Trafford, and Roberto Mancini can certainly feel a lot more confident now City, in keeping with every summer under the ownership of the Abu Dhabi United Group, have once again eclipsed everyone in the transfer market.
When the question of City winning the league was raised a couple of weeks ago, on their pre-season trip to Los Angeles, Mancini shook his head and dismissed it out of hand, simmering with the apparent sense that other people at the club were letting him down. But Sergio Agüero has signed since then and the Argentinian is the kind of player who can make the difference, lift an entire club, invigorate the senses. Agüero, recruited from Atlético Madrid for £38m, is the most exhilarating signing of the summer, a symbol of City's new ambitions and attractiveness.
Yet it has been a quieter time than usual at Eastlands and certainly nothing like what might have been anticipated if you listened to Harry Redknapp in May, when he talked of having inside knowledge of City's targets and predicted their transfer business "will blow your brains out". Redknapp might invite less public cynicism if he spared us this kind of nonsense. City always had to be more restrained because, in short, if they carried on with the money-no-object transfer splurges they would be kicked out of the Champions League in the next few years for not meeting Uefa's financial fair play rules.
As such, the £50m they have spent on Agüero, Gaël Clichy and Stefan Savic is chickenfeed compared to the vast amounts Sheikh Mansour bin Zayed Al Nahyan casually signed off in previous transfer windows, even if there might yet be another addition or two. Last summer, the figure was around £130m. The previous season, the total transfer business was £144m. Mancini has suddenly discovered he no longer has unlimited access to a seemingly bottomless pot of riches and the revelation has not always been to his liking.
City, nonetheless, may have moved marginally ahead of Chelsea as the more credible challengers to United. What we have now is a serious organisation, with real aspirations, a plan, forward thinking, and the resources and mindset to carry it through – barely recognisable from the City of old, the club that was skint, endearingly prone to moments of tragicomedy and, ultimately, a little bit clueless.
The modern-day City are no longer to be patronised, pushed around and put down. After so many years on "the high moral step of continual failure", Simon Curtis of Down The Kippax Steps, probably the best City blog around, noted recently, they are acclimatising to a new existence where "we must try to adopt a different pose for all the flashbulbs suddenly exploding in our faces". It can feel like a different lifetime since Stuart Pearce, one of Mancini's predecessors, was told his transfer budget had gone and played David James, an international goalkeeper, as a centre-forward. In fact, it was six years ago.
The new, ultra-ambitious City increasingly have a big-time feel. They have spent £20m or more on nine different players using Abu Dhabi's oil riches, and have three players earning salaries in excess of £200,000 a week. But there is more to it than that. There are plans to increase the Etihad Stadium (renamed as part of a £400m sponsorship package) to a 60,000 capacity and develop a vast expanse of land around the ground, including a 7,000-seat stadium for their youth team and a new training ground.
What Eastlands doesn't have yet - and this is the point we are reminded of old Manchester City, the club of Peter Swales, Alan Ball and all the rest – is an actual trophy room. They didn't see the point of building one because, quite simply, there was nothing of particular note to fill it. Bernard Halford, the club's now-retired secretary, just used to stick everything that came their way in a broom cupboard.
Very soon, you imagine, that will change. Winning the FA Cup – as United will testify – can have therapeutic qualities for a club that has lapsed for so many years. From here, City should be stronger, more assured, playing with the authentic sense they are now capable of fully structured, productive, grown-up football.
There are, however, imperfections that may need to be addressed if City are to stand a realistic chance of outdoing United, Chelsea and all the rest. For starters, Edin Dzeko and Mario Balotelli will have to do better than last season. Dzeko managed only two league goals in 15 appearances and looked careless of touch at times even though, to give him his due, he would probably be more effective if City operated with orthodox wingers. As for Balotelli, a part of him will probably always be that boy who stayed in the playground too long, but if he avoids the injury problems that disrupted his first season and remembers to take his head out on to the pitch he can endorse Mancini's theory that the good outweighs the bad.
Then, of course, there is The Peculiar Case of Carlos Tevez and an issue so complex there are people at Eastlands who genuinely suspect the proposed £40m move to Corinthians last month was little more than a publicity stunt. Tevez was initially due to return to training for the first time today, albeit against his will, but it will not be until Monday now that Mancini will next see a player who scored or set up 48% of City's league goals last season. The delay feels entirely predictable and merely reiterates Tevez's reluctance to return to Manchester. It is just that there are not many clubs who want to pay more than £40m for a player who has a history of moving every couple of years and who, at 27, is at an age when his transfer value starts to depreciate. Tevez had to be persuaded, with the threat of a fine, to take his place on the open-top bus for City's FA Cup parade, which is fairly ludicrous for a club captain, and his behaviour before and after that ought really to persuade Mancini to hand the armband to Vincent Kompany. Tevez may sulk but, really, so what? If he does stick around, he has already shown he has the knack of playing well, sometimes brilliantly, even when his mind is polluted with grievances.
One certainty is that City will be glad Agüero is not represented by Kia Joorabchian.
So, can they do it? A personal hunch is that their squad, in its current size, might find the combination of going for the title and playing their first season in the Champions League a little too heavy going – but that it will be a close-run thing.
Mancini may also have to be a little less defence-minded at times, even if it is peculiar this tag has attached itself to a team that scored more goals last season than, say, Tottenham Hotspur, so often acclaimed as one of the Premier League's great entertainers.
Mancini certainly does not have to apologise for the fact Joe Hart won the Premier League's "golden glove" award last season, with 18 clean sheets (a club-record 29 in all competitions). It is interesting, though, that two of the three new signings have been defenders. Clichy is not the most watertight full-back around, but the former Arsenal player is quicker and more agile than Aleksandar Kolarov. Mancini had enough reservations about Joleon Lescott to want to replace him with Gary Cahill of Bolton Wanderers earlier in the summer. Savic was the cheaper option and the Montenegro international, eventually joined by Kolo Touré, will push Lescott for the right to partner Kompany, a fine, consistent centre-half.
In midfield, there is a nice blend of steel and finesse. Adam Johnson, on form, can trouble the most accomplished full-back and, at 24, is old enough now to start thinking about establishing himself as more than just an impact player. Yaya Touré should be even better in his second season at the club and only the lazy and misguided still regard Nigel de Jong as little more than a streetwise slugger. The Dutchman is the outstanding defensive midfielder in the league.
As for David Silva, the Spaniard is blessed with a left foot that can make you quicken your step as you walk to the ground.
City also have a manager in charge who knows how to win major trophies and is not frightened of success. Mancini's record in the transfer market cannot be classed as an emphatic success, but he has demonstrated enough over the last 20 months to end any lingering argument about whether it was correct to replace Mark Hughes – even if, with that, the Italian's true personality is increasingly being seen behind the scenes.
Those who know Mancini best, who have followed his career as a player and manager and understand what makes him tick, had warned when he was appointed that his time in Manchester would be measured out in different phases. The first would be Mancini on a charm offensive, working out his territory, getting to know the club politics, then gradually weeding out the players who do not buy into his methods and demonstrating, over time, that he is very much The Boss. The second is a man who permanently seems disappointed with his bosses, who bends for nobody, increasingly detached and empowered with success – in the language of the sport, a bit of a bastard. Which, in fairness, is not necessarily a bad thing in football.
It feels like we are moving into the second part of that process right now. Mancini has won his first trophy and elevated himself to a new position of power. He has said he wants more control, that he should be allowed the influence that Ferguson has at Manchester United. He has admitted having differences with Garry Cook, which is almost always the kind of thing football managers try to keep from the newspapers. And these issues with Cook – as well as the football administrator, Brian Marwood – are still there, still festering.
Mancini, however, is far from the first man in high position not to see eye to eye with his chief executive, particularly in an industry as two-faced as football. The important thing, to quote Mancini, is that he and Cook "have the same target" because, together, they might just achieve it.
City demonstrated in the FA Cup last season that they mean business, turning the semi-final into an ordeal for Ferguson and United before Yaya Touré's winning goal in the final brought down the "Ticker" banner that had hung permanently at Old Trafford to mock that 35-year run without a trophy. The issue now is whether they can go one better and win the league – or even the Champions League – and what we can say for certain is that no other top-six club goes into the season with so much forward momentum.
Paul Lake's autobiography, I'm Not Really Here, comes out today and tells the story of one match in 1989 when City could have guaranteed promotion by beating Bournemouth at Maine Road. They were 3-0 up at half-time – party time! – and the manager, Mel Machin, told the players he was bringing in a special friend for the team talk. In came the comedian Eddie Large – shiny silver suit, sleeves rolled up – to dole out individual advice to the players … each time using a different celebrity impersonation. "Deputy Dawg ordered me to keep tight in defence," Lake recalls. "Cliff Richard advised Trevor Morley to shoot on sight, Harold Wilson told Bob Brightwell to keep it simple and Benny from Crossroads told Andy Dibble to stay awake." The game finished 3-3. Typical City, as they used to say. But no more.
 
[h=1]Premier League preview No8: Liverpool[/h] Extravagant spending has raised expectations at Anfield that a return to Champions League football can be attained


Paul Doyle and Amy Lawrence discuss Liverpool's prospects for the coming season Link to this video Guardian writers' prediction 4th (This is not Andy Hunter's prediction, but the average of our writers' tips)
Last season's position 6th
Odds to win the league 10-1
The voice of reason is often muted at Liverpool pre-season by improbable title predictions (except when the club stares into the financial abyss and asks Roy Hodgson to steady the ship) and this summer's extravagant spending has fuelled a revival. Praise be then for John W Henry, the man who has so far sanctioned over £100m of investment in Kenny Dalglish's squad since January yet did his manager another, cheaper favour this week by confirming common sense prevails at the top at Anfield.
"It's too early for us to talk about winning the league," Liverpool's principal owner said, while backing Manchester United as favourites to retain their title. "Our main goal is to qualify for the Champions League. If we don't, it would be a major disappointment." A reasonable ambition from someone behind the biggest spending spree in Liverpool's history – even taking into account the £50m banked for Fernando Torres and no doubt with a copy of Moneyball burning in the bin – but it will require sustained improvement and further additions to distinguish Dalglish's team from a crowded market.
Henry's vision was portrayed as an ultimatum to Dalglish, as though he leapt from the stands during the 3-3 draw with Valerenga on Monday and slapped Liverpool's manager about the face with a glove. Liverpool officials and management are acutely aware of the need to reclaim a place among the European elite after two seasons on the margins, and have bought realistically – if not in terms of transfer fees then certainly transfer targets – to get there. They also discovered the cost of the club's recent regression along the way.
Liverpool's obvious need to strengthen led them to Phil Jones, Gaël Clichy and Ashley Young this summer, with interest developing further in the then Blackburn Rovers and Arsenal defenders than Aston Villa's former spark. Each player provided a pertinent reminder of Liverpool's position by choosing the champions, FA Cup winners and the Champions League football on offer at Old Trafford and Manchester City instead. Pre-season, in which experimental teams have conceded a total of 15 goals in five friendlies, has merely reinforced where Liverpool's main weakness lies. Interest in the Newcastle United left-back José Enrique and a central defender, possibly Scott Dann of Birmingham City, is expected to develop before the season opens.
Handicapped in direct competition with certain rivals, Liverpool demolished the field to ensure they landed Jordan Henderson for £16m from Sunderland (who insist the fee can rise to £20m) and Stewart Downing for £20m from Aston Villa. The imagination on both deals has been fired more by the sums involved than the player concerned – though one or two former Liverpool managers would argue it is about time the club paid the going-rate – but the two midfielders, plus Charlie Adam for an initial £7m rising to £8.5m, unquestionably improve the balance of the squad, the supply to Andy Carroll and the options available to Dalglish. They are also unlikely to complain about finding it hard to settle on Merseyside.
Adam is arguably Liverpool's most intriguing capture of the summer given the contrast in his influence at Rangers and Blackpool where, unlike at Ibrox, it was maximised by the team and in particular the underrated David Vaughan. He may not prove to be a Xabi Alonso in tartan but he offers a passing range Liverpool have lacked since the Spain international was sold to Real Madrid, plus invaluable accuracy from set pieces. Providing he takes them.
Shoulders shrugged when Downing signed yet Liverpool have required a consistent, natural wide player for several years. Along with Adam, he ensures there can be few excuses for Carroll not developing into the centre-forward Dalglish believes he can be but who, due to injury and with the exception of a rampaging display against Manchester City last season, Anfield has yet to see.
The summer recruits so far suggest a concentration on Carroll's strengths when, of course, it is the outstanding Luis Suárez who holds the key to where Liverpool finish this season. Four goals since his £22.8m arrival from Ajax in January does not begin to describe the impact of a striker who reminded Liverpool that, despite the revulsion over Torres wanting to leave, the club goes on and can go upwards. His performances during Uruguay's triumphant Copa América campaign last month, when Suárez was named player of the tournament, underlined that he possesses a ruthless winning mentality to match his talent. Again, another recent deficiency in Liverpool's armour has been addressed.
Expensive deadwood has still to be cleared and Liverpool's Champions League prospects are not only shaped by the revival Dalglish oversaw in the second half of last season, the emergence of young talent such as John Flanagan and the largesse of Fenway Sports Group, but what may or may not happen at the Emirates, White Hart Lane and Stamford Bridge this month.
Dalglish was irked at Danny Murphy's suggestion last season that he had inherited a team playing without pressure and that the situation would be radically different this term. The Liverpool manager may not have appreciated the slight or where it was coming from, but Murphy was right.
 
[h=1]Wazza and Carroll back for Fabio[/h] Published 13:19 05/08/11 By MirrorFootball

http://www.mirrorfootball.co.uk/new...o-start-for-Fabio-Capello-article781573.html#
Fabio+Capello-England-+Wayne+Rooney+cropped


Wayne Rooney and Andy Carroll will return to spearhead England's attack when Fabio Capello unveils the first squad of his last season as manager tomorrow.
Neither man was available for the Euro 2012 qualifying draw with Switzerland at Wembley in June, which left the Three Lions knowing their fate will not be decided until the visit to Montenegro in October.
However, Rooney is now free from suspension and Carroll has been in goalscoring form during Liverpool's less-than-convincing pre-season, dispelling the injury troubles that have dogged the 22-year-old since his £35million move from Newcastle in January.
With a Group G double-header against Bulgaria and Wales looming in four weeks, Capello will want to check on the form of his first-choice striking duo in next Wednesday's friendly with World Cup runners-up Holland.

Carroll in particular has struggled for continuity despite making an impressive start to his international career, beginning with an eye-catching debut against France last November and then scoring in the friendly with Ghana in March.
He missed the Three Lions most recent game with a thigh injury, which also kept him out of the European Under-21 Championships.
Carroll now seems to have recovered, though, and having talked him up as an integral part of England's Euro 2012 mission, Capello needs confirmation the Geordie can live up to his billing.
England do have problems. Theo Walcott and Jack Wilshere are both nursing ankle injuries and are therefore unlikely to be risked.
Similarly, Steven Gerrard's rapid improvement from a groin problem will not allow Capello to name the Liverpool skipper in his squad.
It means Scott Parker, who is set to start the season as a Championship player with West Ham even if that is not a situation likely to last too long, and Frank Lampard, whom Capello appears determined to look beyond, are pencilled in for starts against Bert van Marwijk's impressive team, currently ranked number two in the world by FIFA.
There are unlikely to be many shocks in the remainder of Capello's squad.
Manchester United's Phil Jones is in the provisional group but will surely not make the cut unless injury strikes one of England's senior defenders over the weekend.
Fulham keeper David Stockdale is set for a return after missing the Switzerland draw due to his wedding the previous day, although his role will be as back-up to Joe Hart and Robert Green.
For England, it marks the chance to avoid a fifth straight home game without a win, which would be their worst run for 30 years.
As far as Capello is concerned, it represents the beginning of an end to a career that earned rich plaudits at club level but which he has failed to replicate on the international stage.
By this time next year, he will know whether he has bowed out as a winner, as he desires, or whether he has joined the long list of England managers deemed to be have failed.
"I think my last year will be very good," he said. "I hope so. I try to make everything better.
"I study. I prepare. I focus. I hope that at the end of my career we will win a trophy."
 
[h=1]Kop flop Jovanovic joins Anderlecht[/h] Published 18:43 05/08/11 By MirrorFootball

http://www.mirrorfootball.co.uk/tra...-dismal-season-at-Anfield-article781660.html#
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Milan Jovanovic has left Liverpool to join Anderlecht after a single season at the Anfield club.
The Reds confirmed tonight that the out-of-favour forward had completed a deal to join the Belgian side.
Jovanovic, now 30, joined Liverpool on a free transfer from Standard Liege last summer, but he was unable to establish himself in the Premier League.
"Milan Jovanovic has today completed his move from Liverpool to Anderlecht," a statement on Liverpool's official Twitter page read.

Jovanovic, who had long been linked with Brussels-based Anderlecht, had been due to undergo a medical today after the two clubs agreed terms on Tuesday.
The skilful Serbian had been a huge success in Belgium with his previous club, boasting an impressive goals-per-game strike rate and catching the eye in the Champions League group stages in 2009.


 
[h=1]Mancini: No Inter bid for Tevez[/h] Published 13:37 05/08/11 By MirrorFootball

http://www.mirrorfootball.co.uk/new...ster-City-Roberto-Mancini-article781574.html#
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Manchester City manager Roberto Mancini has downplayed suggestions Carlos Tevez could move to Inter Milan in a swap deal involving full-back Maicon.
City's wantaway talisman has been linked persistently with Inter but Mancini insists there has been no approach and the Argentinian will return to normal training next week.
Tevez is not available for Sunday's season-opening Community Shield clash against Manchester United having been granted a 21-day break following the end of his involvement in the Copa America.
Tevez, 27, has made clear his desire to leave City but his hopes of rejoining his former Brazilian club Corinthians collapsed last month.

While other players such as Craig Bellamy and Emmanuel Adebayor are unlikely to figure in Mancini's plans, the Italian expects Tevez to continue playing a full role if a move does not materialise.
Mancini said: "He doesn't have another team.
"Carlos is a professional player. If he doesn't have another team in the next 10 days or two weeks I think he will play for us and play serious like last year, like always."
When asked whether Tevez was likely to move before the transfer deadline at the end of the month, Mancini told a press conference today: "I don't know. A lot can happen in one month but if he stays I am happy."
The rumours linking the FA Cup winners with Maicon highlight a lack of cover for first-choice right-back Micah Richards.
Because of that another Argentinian, defender Pablo Zabaletta, has returned to training and will be available to play at Wembley on Sunday.
Mancini said: "Carlos comes back on Monday because he has 21 days after the Copa America.
"Zaba is here because if we had a problem with Micah we have only one fit right-back."
City's £38million record summer signing Sergio Aguero, who was also involved in the Copa America with Argentina, will be on the bench this weekend.
The former Atletico Madrid forward has had blistered feet but is now training as normal after a 20-minute session yesterday.
Mancini said: "Sergio is okay, he will train today.
"He is not 100% ready but he is fit to come on the bench."
Mancini could therefore pair £24million Mario Balotelli with £27million Edin Dzeko up front against United.
The controversial Balotelli has made headlines over the summer after clashing with Mancini during City's pre-season tour of north America.
Balotelli was also quoted this week saying he did not like the city of the Manchester.
Mancini said: "I think he wanted to say he is missing his family and friends.
"I have spoken with him many times. He loves the supporters and team-mates and likes to play in the Barclays Premier League.
"He is young, 21 years old and probably missing his family.
"This situation can happen if you want to play in another country, it is normal.
"The problem for Mario is that he is alone. He doesn't have his family here every day. I can understand this, I don't think it is terrible.
"But we play for Manchester City, a top team in the Premier League.
"This for me is the best championship in Europe and it is a fantastic experience for players from other countries."
The derby element, and City's continuing attempts to overhaul their illustrious neighbours United, has added considerable spice to Sunday's encounter against the Premier League champions.
Mancini is fired up for the game but does not think too much should be read into the result.
He said: "It is the first official match of the season.
"It is important because it is a derby and we want to win, like United.
"But I don't think the teams at the moment are 100% ready to play."
To get his squad fully ready for the season ahead, which will see City play in the Champions League for the first time, Mancini hopes to dip into the transfer market again.
City have also signed defenders Gael Clichy and Stefan Savic in addition to Aguero this summer.
Mancini said: "We are missing other players, we don't have enough players for all the season. This is a problem at the moment.
"I think we need another two or three players."
 
[h=1]Pulis hails 'fantastic' Woodgate[/h] Published 15:07 05/08/11 By MirrorFootball

http://www.mirrorfootball.co.uk/new...c-says-Stoke-s-Tony-Pulis-article781605.html#
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Tony Pulis was pleased to see his judgement rewarded yesterday after an impressive debut from Jonathan Woodgate helped Stoke to victory over Hajduk Split in Croatia, and with it a place in the final qualifying round of the Europa League.
The Potters, who went into the third-round second-leg tie with a 1-0 lead from last week's first leg at the Britannia Stadium, put in a disciplined display over 90 minutes, Pulis' players seemingly untroubled by the vociferous home supporters at Stadion Poljud.
And the performance was capped in stoppage time as Hajduk defender Ljubo Milicevic put Dean Whitehead's cross into his own net under pressure from Ryan Shotton to make it 1-0 on the night and seal a 2-0 win on aggregate.
Key to the visitors' control over proceedings was the superb marshalling job done at the back by skipper Ryan Shawcross and former Tottenham, Real Madrid and England defender Woodgate, who Pulis revealed he had decided would play in the game several days earlier due to his big-match pedigree.

"I thought he and Ryan, the two centre-halves, were absolutely fantastic," the manager said. "I don't think they put a foot wrong. The game was picked (for Woodgate) because we knew we would need experience.
"That was also why we brought Salif Diao on for the last quarter of an hour, because he has played in this type of atmosphere as well.
"As the game went on they were throwing caution to the wind and pushing players forward, and when Salif came on he steadied the game and there was more space.
"Those players helped us enormously."
Woodgate's previous competitive start was for Spurs in November 2009 and prior to last night, the injury-plagued player had made just four appearances in two years.
Following his release by the London club this summer, the 31-year-old was offered a chance to resurrect his career with a pay-as-you-play contract at Stoke and Pulis is confident that if Woodgate keeps up his fitness levels, he can excel with the Potters.
"We are hoping he will get better and better," Pulis said. "I think if he plays the games, we will see that we have taken a real, real player."
Woodgate was delighted to make his bow for his new club and is grateful for the belief Pulis has shown in him.
"That's my first 90 minutes for 18 months, so let's see how I feel," Woodgate told www.stokecityfc.com."But I enjoyed the game and felt good. It's a tough place to come, but all the lads did fantastically well in those circumstances."
He added: "I had a few options in the summer, but Tony Pulis was very keen to bring me here.
"When someone is that keen and they really believe in you, then that's what you want, so I signed and I feel it's the right decision.
"This club has come so far in a very short space of time and this performance proves that we are a good team.
"It's only a few seasons ago that the club were playing in the Championship, yet here we are winning at a top club in Europe.
"It's a big achievement and it gives the lads great confidence going into the new season."

Stoke - who are taking part in major European competition for the first time in 37 years - are now just a two-legged play-off away from the Europa League group stages and were today drawn to face Swiss side FC Thun in the tie.
The Potters will travel to Switzerland for the first leg on August 18 before hosting the return match seven days later.
Giving his reaction, Pulis said: "I'm obviously pleased with the draw, in respect to having the second leg at the Britannia Stadium.
"It's good for us to travel away first so we can get them back to our place and have the full backing of the Britannia Stadium, which I feel is crucial.
"As with a lot of teams in the competition, we don't know much about them but I am sure they will say the same about us.
"No game in Europe is easy, so we will make sure we are fully prepared for this tie."


 
[h=1]Lukaku: I have the ability to succeed at Chelsea[/h] Published 16:41 05/08/11 By MirrorFootball


Anderlecht-Romelu-Lukaku+cropped


Anderlecht striker Romelu Lukaku is convinced that he is good enough to become a regular at Chelsea if he finally completes his protracted move to Stamford Bridge.
Chelsea have been monitoring Lukaku for some time now after his scoring exploits with the Belgian club over the past two years, and the Blues reportedly had an £18million offer turned down for the player last month.
The new Didier Drogba? What Prem fans can actually expect from Romelu Lukaku
The 18-year-old, who has also caught the attention of a number of Europe's other top sides, has regularly stated his desire to join Andre Villas-Boas' side despite the fact that he will face stiff competition for a first-team place.

The Portuguese already has a wealth of options up front, including Didier Drogba and £50million signing Fernando Torres, but Lukaku is confident that a move to London will be worthwhile.
When asked if he is ready to play for a club the calibre of Chelsea, the teenager told Het Laatse Nieuws: "Absolutely. If I'm surrounded by players stronger even than those of Anderlecht, I have the ability to adapt quickly and raise my level.
"(Daniel) Sturridge, (Salomon) Kalou and (Nicolas) Anelka play on the flank and they have two central strikers, Drogba and Torres.
"(Even) When a club has three strikers for a position, they will always play games, because those clubs can play 70 matches a year.
"There may be players sold, so they need me. I will wait."
Real Madrid have also been strongly linked with the Belgium international, who scored 16 times for Anderlecht last season.
Reports in Belgium claim that Anderlecht president Herman Van Holsbeeck travelled to London today to discuss a deal with the Blues, and Lukaku wants his future resolved as soon as possible.
"Anderlecht and my agent are aware that this uncertainty is not good for the club or for me," the youngster added.
"They will fix things at some time in the future."
Villas-Boas could be set to sell his first big-name player since arriving at Stamford Bridge, with Russian reports suggesting that Yury Zhirkov is on the brink of completing a move to free-spending Russian league side Anzhi Makhachkala.
Zhirkov moved to Chelsea for a reported £18million from CSKA Moscow in 2008 but has not been able to secure a regular starting place.
Left-back Ashley Cole, meanwhile, has vowed not to follow the increasing number of footballers joining microblogging site Twitter.
The England full-back has been the subject of several controversial stories about his private life throughout his career and he is not prepared to create further headlines by airing his views via the website.
"Never. It's certain people's preferences but I prefer to keep myself to myself," Cole told Football Focus.
Villas-Boas has underlined his desire since taking over to succeed where his predecessors failed and bring the Champions League trophy to Stamford Bridge.
Cole is no different, admitting he is desperate to help bring the biggest prize in club football to Chelsea.
"It's something that when a player hasn't won it, they want to win it," Cole said.
"And a lot of the players in this Chelsea team have not won it so the hunger is still there.
"You look back on your career and see what other medals and big trophies you've won. A lot of the players have won the Premier League three times, so if they did finish their careers without winning the Champions League it would kill them."
 
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