Transfer news...

Transfer news...

[h=1]The efficient Arsenal front line made more of the high back lines[/h] Both sides squeezed the centre of the pitch, leaving space behind, but the Arsenal strikers took better advantage of it


  • Theo-Walcott-celebrates-s-007.jpg
    Theo Walcott, who used his pace to trouble Ashley Cole, celebrates scoring Arsenal's third goal against Chelsea. Photograph: Ian Walton/Getty Images

    This was a helter-skelter occasion, a game of huge excitement with all caution thrown to the wind, and at its conclusion the professor had gazumped the apprentice. Yet the thrill this match provided was encouraged throughout by naive defending from both sides. On the day, the efficiency of Arsenal's forwards better masked their own team's defensive vulnerability. Chelsea missed their opportunities and paid the price.
    It was the eagerness of both sides to play such high defensive lines that opened this contest up. Arsenal set that tone early on, with Per Mertesacker squeezing the play to keep Fernando Torres further away from goal and, in doing so, ensure the distances between the visitors' backline, midfield and frontline stayed relatively short. The upside of the tactic was that the visitors were never strung out and, when possession was regained, they were close to each other to support. The flip side, though, was the pockets of space left between defenders and the acres behind them that Chelsea's forwards sought to exploit.
    A sharper home attack would have punished the Arsenal bravery. They ran invitingly and unopposed behind Arsenal's full-backs in the contest's opening minutes and might have established a healthy early lead. It was a dangerous tactic for Arsenal to adopt, given that top-quality players, given a fraction of a second, can time a pass to perfection and send team-mates bearing down on goal. Mertesacker might have preferred to have sat deeper among his back four. Yet he was spared at times here because Daniel Sturridge seemed uncertain of touch, Torres was passive and Juan Mata was unable to command the ball enough to dictate the proceedings.
    Chelsea-v-Arsenal-001.jpg
    Both sides squeezed the centre-field, with their forward lines relishing the space left in behind. Here Theo Walcott uses his pace to trouble Ashley Cole when balls are threaded through. Photograph: Graphic But Chelsea too, perhaps somewhat surprisingly, played high and left space behind, which Theo Walcott, in particular, relished. The England winger ran merrily beyond Ashley Cole (see diagram), his accurate selection of pass a pleasing improvement. The opportunities passed up by Gervinho and Robin van Persie in the opening 15 minutes were an indication of how open Chelsea were, with Walcott outpacing Cole at will. When playing such a high line, there must always be pressure exerted on the player in possession who is seeking to thread the ball through. It said a lot for Aaron Ramsey's performance that, after the interval in particular, he was able to escape the attentions of Mikel John Obi when Arsène Wenger pushed the Welshman further forward to contribute telling passes.
    With Alex Song holding, Ramsey was better able to express himself; his is an old head on young shoulders, twisting and turning, with his timing of the pass spot on. Given responsibility, and now injury-free, Ramsey could prove inspirational. Gervinho was bright and worked hard, offering Van Persie strong support on the inside of José Bosingwa. In the end, it was the efficiency of Arsenal's forwards, who took their chances better than their hosts, that claimed victory. The willingness to play high made this a refreshing occasion, one that I'd predicted might end in a 4-4 draw after that frantic opening five minutes. That, in the end, did not prove to be too far out.

 
[h=1]Steven Gerrard leaves Liverpool hospital with a leg in plaster[/h] • Midfielder faces another lay-off with ankle infection
• Gerrard was forced to miss match at West Brom




  • Nick Duxbury
  • The Guardian, Monday 31 October 2011 Article history
    Steven-Gerrard-has-only-r-007.jpg
    Steven Gerrard has only recently returned from injury for Liverpool but faces another lay-off with an ankle infection. Photograph: Martin Rickett/PA

    Fears were growing that Steven Gerrard faces another lengthy injury absence after an infected ankle forced him to visit a Liverpool hospital on Sunday.
    The midfielder was seen leaving hospital on crutches with his right leg in plaster up to the knee. He had fluid drained from the ankle and Liverpool hope the procedure will allow Gerrard a speedy recovery. The extent of the lay-off should be known in the next 48 hours.
    The England international's recent medical history does not bode well. He had only just returned to action following a surgery on a groin problem that also became infected and which kept him on the sidelines for six months.
    The ankle swelled up just before Saturday's game at West Brom, forcing Gerrard to miss the 2-0 victory. A small cut suffered in training on Friday is believed to have become infected. Gerrard looks certain to miss the Premier League game against Swansea at the weekend and England's friendlies with Spain and Sweden, which Fabio Capello is using to assess players for next summer's European Championship. He has not played for his country since the friendly defeat by France last November.
    Kenny Dalglish attempted to be upbeat about Gerrard's predicament. "Steven has got an infection in his ankle," the Liverpool manager said on Saturday. "He was in our minds for the [West Brom] game and it just flared up. We will be more accurate next week [in terms of a prognosis]. It has nothing to do with any injures before. It's an infection. I suppose it's like having an abscess in your mouth."
    Liverpool will be concerned how a small cut deteriorated so quickly. Gerrard travelled with the squad to the Midlands on Friday when he was already in some discomfort. The club's medical staff had thought it would not prevent him from facing Roy Hodgson's side but by Saturday morning it was clear he would have to return to Merseyside.
    Another long lay-off is the last thing Gerrard needs. Groin surgery at the end of last season on a troublesome muscle injury ended the torment of having to have pain-killing injections to play. But infection delayed his return by three months and Gerrard said at the time he feared he would not play again after that setback. "There were times when I was as low as I've ever been as a footballer," he said. "It's only natural that you have doubts."
    Liverpool have been able to call on his services only five times this season, with Gerrard marking his first start with a goal against Manchester United. The impact of the latest setback on the player and Liverpool's quest to regain Champions League status could be immense.

 
[h=1]Kolo considers quitting City over image rights row[/h] Published 22:30 30/10/11 By Darren Lewis

http://www.mirrorfootball.co.uk/new...tle-over-his-image-rights-article824592.html#
Manchester-City-Wigan-Kolo-Toure-Premier-League+cropped


Manchester City have launched a bizarre bid to take away £1.5million of Kolo Toure's image rights in a bitter battle over his failed drugs test.
The stunned Ivory Coast defender has told friends he will consider leaving the club in January if they succeed at a hearing, due to take place later today, chaired by club executive Brian Marwood.
City first tried to fine the £120,000-a-week star around £500,000, but have now decided to go for Toure's image rights, which are are worth 20-25 percent of his earnings. But there is incredulity among the City players that, with the club doing so well on the pitch, top brass would put themselves on collision course with another top player.
They're also in dispute with Carlos Tevez.

Toure's younger brother Yaya is also said to be angry at the debacle but it is understood manager Roberto Mancini has no involvement in the pursuit of the former Arsenal star.
The Toure camp say City's stance represents a double standard since they supported the player during the legal process and disciplinary hearings with the FA, which ended with a six-month ban in May from the World Anti-Doping agency.
Toure, who returned to action in September, had failed a drug test after taking one of his wife's slimming pills, containing a banned substance, to help control his weight.
No disciplinary action was taken by City at the time and he received his image rights payment as normal in August.


 
[h=1]Everton in talks to solve money woes with Indian backers[/h] Published 22:29 30/10/11 By Alan Nixon

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Everton-Bill-Kenwright+cropped


Everton supremo Bill Kenwright is in talks with the Jain Group – a wealthy Indian company – about becoming his club's financial saviour.
The Mumbai-based conglomerate are huge in their own country, with energy and property businesses, and they now want to expand into England.
Jain have their sights on Everton as a possible project, pumping in cash for a new ground.
Leading officials from the company are looking into ways of buying Everton or lending them money, with Kenwright kept on in some capacity – and boss David Moyes given a boost in the process.

The Toffees have been on a tight budget for a few years and Kenwright is actively looking for a buyer or backer.


 
[h=1]Cleverley injury blow for Man United[/h] Published 22:27 30/10/11 By David Maddock

http://www.mirrorfootball.co.uk/new...-clash-with-Otelul-Galati-article824589.html#
Bolton-Manchester-United-Tom-Cleverley-Premier-League+cropped


Manchester United got back to winning ways at Everton – but not without cost.
Tom Cleverley picked up an ankle injury and will miss the Champions League showdown with Romanian side Otelul Galati on Wednesday.
And Old Trafford boss Sir Alex Ferguson will be without defender Chris Smalling and winger Ashley Young.
Smalling has broken his foot, and could be out until December, while Young has failed to recover from a toe injury.

"Cleverley felt his ankle again, but he should be okay in a week," said Sir Alex about the midfielder.
 
[h=1]Capello faces England rift over race row[/h] Published 22:29 30/10/11 By Darren Lewis

http://www.mirrorfootball.co.uk/new...nd-camp-for-Fabio-Capello-article824634.html#
England-Rio-Ferdinand-John-Terry+cropped


Fabio Capello faces a split in the England camp over the John Terry race row. The Italian names his squad for the forthcoming friendlies against Spain and Sweden this weekend – but the FA investigation into the row is now unlikely to be concluded before the squad is named.
Some players are uneasy about the prospect of Terry leading the side after claims he called Anton Ferdinand a “f****** black ****”.
The England captain denies racism but Ferdinand is backed fully by brother Rio and mum Janice in demanding action.
Ferdinand, who featured in QPR’s 3-1 defeat to Spurs yesterday, will have his evidence formally submitted to the FA over the next 24 hours. The FA will also examine the evidence of John Terry – who gave his submission on Friday – and are revisiting TV footage as well as talking to other players.

They will then decide if there is a case to answer. If there is, both players would have a set period in which to respond. If the FA believe there are still grounds to press ahead, the players would appear before a three-man panel consisting of an FA board member, a football expert and a chairman.
Ferdinand had another torrid afternoon yesterday, seven days after his controversial confrontation with Terry, with Scott Parker driving Spurs to victory.
Spurs boss Harry Redknapp admitted his side were braced for a QPR fightback when it “all kicked off” in the visitors’ dressing room at the interval.
He said: “First half we were fantastic, the way we shifted the ball about and our movement was great, but it’s always difficult when you come in 2-0 up and you know it should be four or five.
“But you could hear they were arguing and all sorts going on in the away dressing room at half-time.
“It was all kicking off, and I knew they were going to have a go at us in the second half for sure, and to be fair they lifted it.
“Suddenly it’s a dangerous situation when it’s only 2-1 and you think it should be all over, but Gareth Bale came back to finish them off with a great finish.”
Tottenham, fifth in the table, have now taken 19 points from the last 21.


 
[h=1]Everton in talks to solve money woes with Indian backers[/h] Published 22:29 30/10/11 By Alan Nixon


Everton-Bill-Kenwright+cropped


Everton supremo Bill Kenwright is in talks with the Jain Group – a wealthy Indian company – about becoming his club's financial saviour.
The Mumbai-based conglomerate are huge in their own country, with energy and property businesses, and they now want to expand into England.
Jain have their sights on Everton as a possible project, pumping in cash for a new ground.
Leading officials from the company are looking into ways of buying Everton or lending them money, with Kenwright kept on in some capacity – and boss David Moyes given a boost in the process.

The Toffees have been on a tight budget for a few years and Kenwright is actively looking for a buyer or backer.
 
[h=1]Saints set to pinch Donny striker from Ipswich[/h] Published 22:27 30/10/11 By MirrorFootball


billy-sharp-doncaster-cropped


Southampton boss Nigel Adkins is set to hijack Ipswich’s £2million bid to land Doncaster striker Billy Sharp.
Adkins has moved to pinch Sharp on an initial loan this week as he attempts to strengthen the Championship league leaders. Sharp, 25, played under Adkins at Scunthorpe.
 
[h=1]Transfer news, rumours and gossip from Monday's papers[/h] Published 09:05 31/10/11 By Football Spy

http://www.mirrorfootball.co.uk/new...gossip-from-Monday-papers-article824779.html#
PaperTalk.jpg


Transfer stories from today's Daily Mirror
Kolo considers quitting City over image rights row
Saints set to pinch Donny striker from Ipswich
Wigan star on Juve's shopping list

Foxes eye Hull boss as Sven replacement
Carlos Tevez lined up for Napoli swap deal
Man City misfit set for Baggies switch in January
Stories from other papers and websites
Wycombe's Jordan Ibe, 15, has turned down a £100,000 move to Fulham , because he wants to join a bigger club. (The Sun)
Tottenham manager Harry Redknapp has already got his sights on his January targets. The Spurs boss wants to bring Manchester United pair Rio Ferdinand, 32 and striker Michael Owen, 31, to White Hart Lane in a £10m deal. (CaughtOffside.com)
Swansea midfielder Mark Gower is set to be awarded a new deal by the club. (The Sun)
The agent of Parma forward Sebastian Giovinco has revealed that Chelsea owner Roman Abramovich is a big admirer of his client, although the Blues have not made an offer yet. (Goal.com)
Manchester City will move for Roma's Daniele De Rossi in the January transfer window. (La Gazzetta dello Sport)




 
[h=1]PFA chief: Manchester City's hearing of Kolo Touré case is 'strange'[/h] • Gordon Taylor says Touré's six-month ban was enough
• Outcome of City's disciplinary hearing is expected this week




  • Press Association
  • guardian.co.uk, Monday 31 October 2011 19.44 GMT Article history
    Manchester-Citys-Kolo-Tou-007.jpg
    Manchester City's Kolo Touré served a six-month ban after he tested positive for a banned substance. Photograph: Ed Sykes/Action Images

    The chief executive of the Professional Footballers' Association, Gordon Taylor, has labelled Manchester City's decision to hold a disciplinary hearing with Kolo Touré over his failed drugs test as "strange".
    Taylor attended the hearing with Touré on Monday afternoon and the outcome of the gross misconduct charge is expected this week. The Manchester City defender, who has served a six-month ban imposed by the Football Association, produced character references from his former club Arsenal and a number of fellow players at the hearing and he insists he tested positive because he took one of his wife's slimming pills not knowing it contained a banned substance.
    Taylor said the six-month ban was punishment enough but City insist the PFA knew about the charge as far back as July. "We have had the hearing today and we presented the fact that the FA could have given him two years but only gave him six months because they took into account that it was a genuine mistake and not performance enhancing or a diuretic to mask drug taking," said Taylor. "He also had excellent character references from Arsenal and a number of other players.
    "It just seems strange that after being welcomed back to the club, reinstated as captain for Carling Cup matches, that someone has come up with this hearing. Instead of sending out a message that this is someone who has made a mistake and served his punishment already, they are now taking action against him again. It seems very strange against someone who is acknowledged by all concerned to have a top-class character."
    Taylor said the 30-year-old Ivory Coast defender, whose brother Yaya Touré is also at Manchester City, had been shocked to find out City were to hold a disciplinary hearing. "He trained every day while he was off and maintained a very positive attitude so he was shocked to find they were looking to take action against him."
    The hearing was held by City's football administrator, Brian Marwood, and a City lawyer. City's chief communications officer, Victoria Kloss, said: "It is not a new decision – we had consultations with the PFA about this in July." It is understood the hearing had been postponed on a number of previous occasions due to the people involved being unavailable.

 
[h=1]Egos could destroy Manchester City's title bid – Rafael van der Vaart[/h] • 'That's the problem when you have too many big stars'
• Forward predicts Tottenham will finish above Arsenal




  • Katy Murrells
  • guardian.co.uk, Monday 31 October 2011 17.16 GMT Article history
    Rafael-Van-der-Vaart-007.jpg
    Rafael van der Vaart celebrates his goal during Tottenham's 3-1 win over QPR. Photograph: Nigel French/PA

    Tottenham's Rafael van der Vaart believes the wheels could come off Manchester City's title bid because of too many "egos" within the squad.
    The Dutchman scored in Sunday's 3-1 home win over Queens Park Rangers, a victory that moved Spurs up to fifth in the Premier League, nine points behind the leaders.
    "Manchester City look like they're the best team in the league but below them you have a lot of good teams and we are one of those teams," Van der Vaart said. "They're winning games easily and how they played against Manchester United [in the 6-1 derby win] was impressive but they also have the difficulty of a lot of egos, so that could be a problem.
    "I was at Real Madrid and that's the problem when you have too many big stars. When you play for a top team and they buy a lot of good players, a lot of other players aren't happy. You look at Emmanuel Adebayor, a great player for us, but at City he was training with the youngsters. He is a great player and he was not even training with the first team."
    Van der Vaart is also confident that Spurs will finish above Arsenal in the table and has told their north London rivals not to get carried away with Saturday's frenzied 5-3 victory at Chelsea. Arsenal have now won eight of their last nine games as their recovery from a dismal start to the season gathers pace.
    "I believe we're better," he said. "Yes, they're on a good run, but so are we: six wins and a draw from our last seven league games. It's a long season still but I think we have a better squad, a bigger squad. This club want to be in the top four."

 
[h=1]Is searing attack or slack defence behind Premier League goal glut?[/h] Money has accelerated the high-scoring trend, but this also seems to be period of decline for defenders



  • Striking statistics: click for full-size image. Photograph: The Guardian

    "It's about time we won 1-0," said Sir Alex Ferguson. He was luxuriating in the austere victory at Goodison Park on Saturday. A remark of that sort coming from the manager of Manchester United, a club historically associated with verve, carries the whiff of heresy. Ferguson, though, was expressing a mood that must be shared by many of his counterparts.
    The Premier League is certainly not cheap, but it has turned cheerful. There has been an average this season of 2.98 goals per match. This compares with 2.83 in the Bundesliga, a competition renowned for its crowd‑pleasing culture. The figure for Spain is 2.52. Serie A, mindful of its famed stringency, confines itself to 2.46.
    Of the most prominent European football nations, England is in a madcap mood. Ferguson was in earnest about that result against Everton. He would have felt as if events, or the lack of them, showed the afternoon bowing to his will at last. Other games have left him as a bystander. It must have delighted Ferguson when United beat Arsenal 8‑2, and the misery would have been searing in the 6‑1 loss to Manchester City, but in each case matters cannot have gone as he had anticipated.
    There is a trend to all this scoring, and money has accelerated the process, even if United are no spendthrifts. While Chelsea's purchase of Fernando Torres in January for £50m may have left Liverpool in substantial profit, the Stamford Bridge club was trying to set itself apart and was therefore in the mood to meet any price. The same outlook applied that month when David Luiz arrived from Benfica for £21m.
    He embodied a certain idealism, as there is a trace of the old-fashioned libero about him, but this season, with injuries hindering him, he has started just two of Chelsea's 10 Premier League matches. While it is a little unusual to see deals of such magnitude go through at that stage of the season, City were raising the tempo. Edin Dzeko had joined them on 7 January. The deals that took Torres and David Luiz to Stamford Bridge did not go through until the very end of that month.
    There is no proof that Chelsea were being hustled by City's actions into completing the transfers, but the clubs were locked together by a readiness to meet whatever price had been set by the selling club. That policy has not paid off so far for Chelsea and, after such expense, it was ironic at the weekend that they should be outgunned 5‑3 on their own ground by financially circumspect Arsenal.
    It does not follow, however, that the shock and awe tactic, on the field or in the transfer market, will fail. At City, Roberto Mancini has committed himself to a more expansive style and the side have not kept a clean sheet in any competition since 1 October. The defensive record, broadly speaking, continues to be impressive, but the side are experiencing difficulties in the Champions League.
    Villarreal were thwarted in stoppage time at Eastlands when an exquisite pass from James Milner led to Sergio Agüero's winner. City have been part of a switch towards expansiveness. The effect of that is accentuated by random factors in the Premier League at large that have left some sides less secure.
    There are doubts now about Rio Ferdinand's capacity to play regularly for United and he did not get off the bench in the Everton game. The outcome had as much to do with the opposition's predictability as with the authority of Nemanja Vidic at centre‑half.
    It was only the fourth occasion in 12 Premier League fixtures that United have avoided conceding a goal. This seems to be a period of decline for defenders. John Terry has always had the look of a player combating his own aches and pains as much as the opposition's forwards. It is premature to suppose his time is over but hardly anyone would have anticipated Arsenal running in five goals against Chelsea at Stamford Bridge. Fabio Capello should be fretting about the make-up of the England back four at Euro 2012.
    Gary Cahill started in the 2-2 draw with Montenegro in Podgorica even though the manager would rather have had a centre-half steeped in Champions League experience. For those, unlike Capello, who are free to enjoy the volatility that comes when defences appear at a disadvantage, it will be good news if it takes a while before order is restored.
    Tottenham Hotspur's play was exquisite and lethal on Sunday, especially in the move that led to the third goal, from Gareth Bale, but scoring was a relief to the hosts as well as a joy, as Queens Park Rangers had looked as if they might just level the score at 2-2. This is no time to be a defender in the Premier League, but it is a moment to be relished by spectators.
    FORMER PLAYERS AND MANAGER GIVE THEIR VIEWS …
    [h=2]Ray Houghton, former Ireland midfielder[/h]"This goal glut is down to dreadful defending, simply as that. I've felt for ages that the art of defending has gone from most Premier League sides, and results this season, like Arsenal's win at Chelsea, prove that. It's hard to pinpoint why this has happened, but ultimately it comes down to how teams are being coached. Perhaps they are not doing much defensive work, perhaps the defensive coaches are not good enough. It's not just about the back four; teams are not defending from the front like they used to, strikers are dropping off and allowing the opposition to build up pressure. When that happens, lots of chances are going to be created"
    [h=2]Linvoy Primus, former Portsmouth defender[/h]"There have been defensive mistakes but this is largely down to the rise in quality of creative players in the Premier League. Sergio Agüero and Juan Mata have come in, while the likes of David Silva and Luiz Suárez are improving. These are players who not only score goals but create them too, and such is their threat that defenders are struggling to stop them. At Arsenal, it is also their creative players, such as Theo Walcott and Aaron Ramsey, who are in form right now. As the season goes on we should see defences getting to grips with the talent in the league as well as improving their own form. As such, there should be fewer crazy scorelines"
    [h=2]John Scales, former England defender[/h]"The teams that have suffered heavy defeats this season have all struggled to put out a consistent defence. Manchester United have not had Rio Ferdinand and Nemanja Vidic for long spells, while Arsenal have introduced new players to their back line. Chelsea have also chopped and changed and when a side does that there are going to be problems. Beyond that, the game is undoubtedly changing here. Teams like Manchester City and Chelsea are playing in a more continental, between-the-lines style and that is something English defences are not used to. Once they become more clued up to this, we should start seeing more clean sheets"
    [h=2]Joe Royle, former Everton manager[/h]"Most of the goals are being scored by the top sides and Roberto Mancini subtly changing Manchester City's philosophy from "we will not be beaten'" to "we will win" has made a big difference. Mancini has top attacking players at his disposal and they have arrived at a time when injuries and age are catching up with top defenders such as Rio Ferdinand and John Terry. From an England viewpoint it's worrying because there is suddenly a shortage of really top English defenders. Equally, a lot of the goals are being scored by foreign players; Wayne Rooney apart, how many truly international quality English strikers are there in the Premier League?"
    [h=2]Nigel Winterburn, former Arsenal left-back[/h]"Teams appear to be playing in a more adventurous style, and that not only increases the amount of goals they score but also the amount they concede, as defences become more vulnerable to the counterattack the higher up the pitch they go. Saying that, some sides are just making basic errors, especially at set pieces. What we may see as the season goes on is a reduction in the big thrashings but a wider spread of two- and three-goal winning-margins, including among the promoted clubs. After how Blackpool performed last year they seem to recognise that in the Premier League, attack is the best form of defence and that you might as well go for it"

 
[h=1]Is searing attack or slack defence behind Premier League goal glut?[/h] Money has accelerated the high-scoring trend, but this also seems to be period of decline for defenders



  • Striking statistics: click for full-size image. Photograph: The Guardian

    "It's about time we won 1-0," said Sir Alex Ferguson. He was luxuriating in the austere victory at Goodison Park on Saturday. A remark of that sort coming from the manager of Manchester United, a club historically associated with verve, carries the whiff of heresy. Ferguson, though, was expressing a mood that must be shared by many of his counterparts.
    The Premier League is certainly not cheap, but it has turned cheerful. There has been an average this season of 2.98 goals per match. This compares with 2.83 in the Bundesliga, a competition renowned for its crowd‑pleasing culture. The figure for Spain is 2.52. Serie A, mindful of its famed stringency, confines itself to 2.46.
    Of the most prominent European football nations, England is in a madcap mood. Ferguson was in earnest about that result against Everton. He would have felt as if events, or the lack of them, showed the afternoon bowing to his will at last. Other games have left him as a bystander. It must have delighted Ferguson when United beat Arsenal 8‑2, and the misery would have been searing in the 6‑1 loss to Manchester City, but in each case matters cannot have gone as he had anticipated.
    There is a trend to all this scoring, and money has accelerated the process, even if United are no spendthrifts. While Chelsea's purchase of Fernando Torres in January for £50m may have left Liverpool in substantial profit, the Stamford Bridge club was trying to set itself apart and was therefore in the mood to meet any price. The same outlook applied that month when David Luiz arrived from Benfica for £21m.
    He embodied a certain idealism, as there is a trace of the old-fashioned libero about him, but this season, with injuries hindering him, he has started just two of Chelsea's 10 Premier League matches. While it is a little unusual to see deals of such magnitude go through at that stage of the season, City were raising the tempo. Edin Dzeko had joined them on 7 January. The deals that took Torres and David Luiz to Stamford Bridge did not go through until the very end of that month.
    There is no proof that Chelsea were being hustled by City's actions into completing the transfers, but the clubs were locked together by a readiness to meet whatever price had been set by the selling club. That policy has not paid off so far for Chelsea and, after such expense, it was ironic at the weekend that they should be outgunned 5‑3 on their own ground by financially circumspect Arsenal.
    It does not follow, however, that the shock and awe tactic, on the field or in the transfer market, will fail. At City, Roberto Mancini has committed himself to a more expansive style and the side have not kept a clean sheet in any competition since 1 October. The defensive record, broadly speaking, continues to be impressive, but the side are experiencing difficulties in the Champions League.
    Villarreal were thwarted in stoppage time at Eastlands when an exquisite pass from James Milner led to Sergio Agüero's winner. City have been part of a switch towards expansiveness. The effect of that is accentuated by random factors in the Premier League at large that have left some sides less secure.
    There are doubts now about Rio Ferdinand's capacity to play regularly for United and he did not get off the bench in the Everton game. The outcome had as much to do with the opposition's predictability as with the authority of Nemanja Vidic at centre‑half.
    It was only the fourth occasion in 12 Premier League fixtures that United have avoided conceding a goal. This seems to be a period of decline for defenders. John Terry has always had the look of a player combating his own aches and pains as much as the opposition's forwards. It is premature to suppose his time is over but hardly anyone would have anticipated Arsenal running in five goals against Chelsea at Stamford Bridge. Fabio Capello should be fretting about the make-up of the England back four at Euro 2012.
    Gary Cahill started in the 2-2 draw with Montenegro in Podgorica even though the manager would rather have had a centre-half steeped in Champions League experience. For those, unlike Capello, who are free to enjoy the volatility that comes when defences appear at a disadvantage, it will be good news if it takes a while before order is restored.
    Tottenham Hotspur's play was exquisite and lethal on Sunday, especially in the move that led to the third goal, from Gareth Bale, but scoring was a relief to the hosts as well as a joy, as Queens Park Rangers had looked as if they might just level the score at 2-2. This is no time to be a defender in the Premier League, but it is a moment to be relished by spectators.
    FORMER PLAYERS AND MANAGER GIVE THEIR VIEWS …
    [h=2]Ray Houghton, former Ireland midfielder[/h]"This goal glut is down to dreadful defending, simply as that. I've felt for ages that the art of defending has gone from most Premier League sides, and results this season, like Arsenal's win at Chelsea, prove that. It's hard to pinpoint why this has happened, but ultimately it comes down to how teams are being coached. Perhaps they are not doing much defensive work, perhaps the defensive coaches are not good enough. It's not just about the back four; teams are not defending from the front like they used to, strikers are dropping off and allowing the opposition to build up pressure. When that happens, lots of chances are going to be created"
    [h=2]Linvoy Primus, former Portsmouth defender[/h]"There have been defensive mistakes but this is largely down to the rise in quality of creative players in the Premier League. Sergio Agüero and Juan Mata have come in, while the likes of David Silva and Luiz Suárez are improving. These are players who not only score goals but create them too, and such is their threat that defenders are struggling to stop them. At Arsenal, it is also their creative players, such as Theo Walcott and Aaron Ramsey, who are in form right now. As the season goes on we should see defences getting to grips with the talent in the league as well as improving their own form. As such, there should be fewer crazy scorelines"
    [h=2]John Scales, former England defender[/h]"The teams that have suffered heavy defeats this season have all struggled to put out a consistent defence. Manchester United have not had Rio Ferdinand and Nemanja Vidic for long spells, while Arsenal have introduced new players to their back line. Chelsea have also chopped and changed and when a side does that there are going to be problems. Beyond that, the game is undoubtedly changing here. Teams like Manchester City and Chelsea are playing in a more continental, between-the-lines style and that is something English defences are not used to. Once they become more clued up to this, we should start seeing more clean sheets"
    [h=2]Joe Royle, former Everton manager[/h]"Most of the goals are being scored by the top sides and Roberto Mancini subtly changing Manchester City's philosophy from "we will not be beaten'" to "we will win" has made a big difference. Mancini has top attacking players at his disposal and they have arrived at a time when injuries and age are catching up with top defenders such as Rio Ferdinand and John Terry. From an England viewpoint it's worrying because there is suddenly a shortage of really top English defenders. Equally, a lot of the goals are being scored by foreign players; Wayne Rooney apart, how many truly international quality English strikers are there in the Premier League?"
    [h=2]Nigel Winterburn, former Arsenal left-back[/h]"Teams appear to be playing in a more adventurous style, and that not only increases the amount of goals they score but also the amount they concede, as defences become more vulnerable to the counterattack the higher up the pitch they go. Saying that, some sides are just making basic errors, especially at set pieces. What we may see as the season goes on is a reduction in the big thrashings but a wider spread of two- and three-goal winning-margins, including among the promoted clubs. After how Blackpool performed last year they seem to recognise that in the Premier League, attack is the best form of defence and that you might as well go for it"

 
[h=1]Tevez 'wants to stay in the Premier League'[/h] Published 22:31 31/10/11 By David McDonnell

http://www.mirrorfootball.co.uk/tra...s-advisor-Kia-Joorabchian-article825204.html#
Fulham-Manchester-City-Carlos-Tevez-cropped


Carlos Tevez wants to move to another Premier League club having been exiled by Manchester City.
Tevez, out of favour with City boss Roberto Mancini following the notorious bench episode against Bayern Munich, is keen to stay in England.
The striker’s City career looks over after Mancini said he was “finished” at the club and Tevez’s advisor, Kia Joorabchian, said the 27-year-old would welcome a move elsewhere in the Premier League.
“His family are now living in England, so he’s quite happy and settled,” said Joorabchian.

“He had some problems about being away from them before, but they are with him now and everything is fine. He’d be happy to move to another Premier League club.”
Tevez was initially charged with refusing to come off the bench under orders from Mancini in a Champions League tie in Munich on September 27.
City were forced to downgrade that charge to one of refusing to carry out duties as a first-team player and duly found Tevez guilty of five separate breaches of his contract.
Although City fined Tevez four weeks’ wages - around £1million - they were forced to halve that penalty on orders from the Professional Footballers’ Association, which sets the rulings for such practices.
“This week, the Professional Footballers’ Association rejected the claim that he had refused to come on as a substitute,” said Joorabchian.
“That has changed everything and clarified what actually happened.
“Carlos was desperate to play. He loves to play the game and always wants to play. Having to sit on the sidelines is very tough for him.
“It’s not easy for him at the moment, but, in the January transfer window, City will want to get him out either on a permanent basis or on loan.
“We’ll have to wait and see what happens.”
Joorabchian did confirm there was no way Tevez would return to former club West Ham, after their boss Sam Allardyce had expressed interest in taking him on loan.
“He loves West Ham... but that’s not going to happen,” said Joorabchian.
Balotelli can be City's Euro star - Mancini


 
[h=1]Thursday's gossip column - transfers and rumours[/h]
gossip_466.gif

TRANSFER GOSSIP
Real Madrid are set to complete the £48m signing of Brazilian striker Neymar in January - and will make the teenager one of their highest-paid players.
Full story: talkSPORT

Manchester City are to offer Tottenham the option of signing on-loan striker Emmanuel Adebayor in a permament £10m deal in the summer, as City contemplate moves for Napoli duo Edinson Cavani and Marek Hamsik.
Full story: Metro

Blackburn plan to place a hefty £18m price tag on Canadian forward Junior Hoilett, whose contract expires at the end of the season, in the hope of averting interest from Tottenham and Newcastle.
Full story: Daily Mirror

Tottenham target Casemiro will not be sold until after 2013, his club Sao Paulo have said after Inter Milan made an enquiry regarding the attacking midfielder.
Full story: talkSPORT

Fulham and QPR are set to compete for out-of-favour Juventus striker Amauri in the January transfer window, according to reports in Italy.
Full story: talkSPORT

Doncaster boss Dean Saunders is keen to sign West Brom striker Marc-Antoine Fortune on loan.
Full story: Daily Mirror


OTHER GOSSIP
Former Crystal Palace and Reading manager Steve Coppell is in talks to become the new Portsmouth boss, 15 months after announcing his retirement.
Full story: Daily Mirror

Huddersfield boss Lee Clark has emerged as the favourite to succeed Sven-Goran Eriksson as Leicester manager, and could cost the Foxes £300,000 in compensation.
Full story: Daily Mirror

However, the Daily Mail report that former Ipswich manager Roy Keane has been targeted to take over at the King Power Stadium.
Full story: Daily Mail

Brighton manager Gus Poyet has revealed he will quit his post if he is asked to change his team's style of play following a mediocre recent run.
Full story: talkSPORT

AND FINALLY
Edenbridge Bonfire Society in Kent have unveiled a 30ft effigy of Manchester City striker Mario Balotelli, mimicking the striker's recent misfortune with an exploding firework inside his house. Last year the Kent-based group burned an effigy of Wayne Rooney.
Full story: Daily Mirror

West Ham's turgid 0-0 draw with Bristol City was enlivened by an appearance from reality TV star Amy Childs sporting a Hammers claret and blue shirt.
Full story: Metro
 
[h=1]Thursday's gossip column - transfers and rumours[/h]
gossip_466.gif

TRANSFER GOSSIP
Real Madrid are set to complete the £48m signing of Brazilian striker Neymar in January - and will make the teenager one of their highest-paid players.
Full story: talkSPORT

Manchester City are to offer Tottenham the option of signing on-loan striker Emmanuel Adebayor in a permament £10m deal in the summer, as City contemplate moves for Napoli duo Edinson Cavani and Marek Hamsik.
Full story: Metro

Blackburn plan to place a hefty £18m price tag on Canadian forward Junior Hoilett, whose contract expires at the end of the season, in the hope of averting interest from Tottenham and Newcastle.
Full story: Daily Mirror

Tottenham target Casemiro will not be sold until after 2013, his club Sao Paulo have said after Inter Milan made an enquiry regarding the attacking midfielder.
Full story: talkSPORT

Fulham and QPR are set to compete for out-of-favour Juventus striker Amauri in the January transfer window, according to reports in Italy.
Full story: talkSPORT

Doncaster boss Dean Saunders is keen to sign West Brom striker Marc-Antoine Fortune on loan.
Full story: Daily Mirror


OTHER GOSSIP
Former Crystal Palace and Reading manager Steve Coppell is in talks to become the new Portsmouth boss, 15 months after announcing his retirement.
Full story: Daily Mirror

Huddersfield boss Lee Clark has emerged as the favourite to succeed Sven-Goran Eriksson as Leicester manager, and could cost the Foxes £300,000 in compensation.
Full story: Daily Mirror

However, the Daily Mail report that former Ipswich manager Roy Keane has been targeted to take over at the King Power Stadium.
Full story: Daily Mail

Brighton manager Gus Poyet has revealed he will quit his post if he is asked to change his team's style of play following a mediocre recent run.
Full story: talkSPORT

AND FINALLY
Edenbridge Bonfire Society in Kent have unveiled a 30ft effigy of Manchester City striker Mario Balotelli, mimicking the striker's recent misfortune with an exploding firework inside his house. Last year the Kent-based group burned an effigy of Wayne Rooney.
Full story: Daily Mirror

West Ham's turgid 0-0 draw with Bristol City was enlivened by an appearance from reality TV star Amy Childs sporting a Hammers claret and blue shirt.
Full story: Metro
 
[h=1]Tottenham Hotspur boss Harry Redknapp has heart surgery[/h] Page last updated at 15:56 GMT, Wednesday, 2 November 2011



_56425623_121737576.jpg
Spurs will travel to Russia without Redknapp for Thursday's Europa League tie Tottenham manager Harry Redknapp has had successful surgery to unblock coronary arteries.
The 64-year-old was admitted to hospital on Tuesday night for tests and had two stents inserted during an operation on Wednesday.
Redknapp is due to be discharged within 48 hours but is unable to travel to Russia for Tottenham's Europa League match against Rubin Kazan on Thursday.
Spurs are in top spot in Group A, two points ahead of Greek side PAOK.
Assistant manager Kevin Bond and first-team coach Joe Jordan will assume first-team duties in Redknapp's absence.
Spurs chairman Daniel Levy said: "We are delighted the operation went so smoothly and successfully. Knowing Harry he will want to rush back, but it's important that he only does so when he has recovered properly."
Redknapp had told the Sun he was confident the surgery would not stop him taking charge of Sunday's Premier League match at Fulham.
[h=2]HARRY REDKNAPP MANAGERIAL RECORD[/h] Continue reading the main story
  • 1983-1992 Bournemouth
  • 1994-2001 West Ham
  • 2002-2004 Portsmouth
  • 2004-2005 Southampton
  • 2005-2008 Portsmouth
  • 2008-present Tottenham

He said: "I'm hoping I can be back at work again in a couple of days."
The treatment is known as a coronary angioplasty and Maureen Talbot, a senior cardiac nurse with the British Heart Foundation, explained: "It's a pretty routine procedure. People don't have to go to theatre for it, it's a procedure, not surgery and it's done under local anaesthetic."
West Ham boss Sam Allardyce had angioplasty after chest "discomfort" at the end of 2009 but reported a clean bill of health soon afterwards, while former Liverpool boss Graeme Souness had heart surgery in 1992 but led the team out in the FA Cup final only days after leaving hospital.
Manchester United boss Sir Alex Ferguson had a pacemaker fitted in 2004, but was back at work the following day.
Other managers in the top-flight have had more serious heart-related conditions, Joe Kinnear having a triple-heart bypass in 2009 which ended his time in charge at Newcastle.
Former Liverpool and Aston Villa boss Gerard Houllier had to have an 11-hour emergency aortic dissection after experiencing heart problems at half-time during Liverpool's game against Leeds in 2001.
He returned to the Anfield hot-seat following a five-month recuperation but needed a similar operation last season after suffering another heart scare at Villa, and this time decided to step down.
 
[h=1]Fabio Capello plays reluctant part in John Terry's England sideshow[/h] England's coach has a big decision to make regarding the captain's inclusion for the friendlies with Spain and Sweden



  • Fabio-Capello-has-another-007.jpg
    The England coach, Fabio Capello, right, has another big decision to make regarding John Terry's captaincy. Photograph: Owen Humphreys/PA

    On one side – the presumption of innocence. On the other – a growing crisis of race, in which black footballers are abused on Twitter, travelling Chelsea fans in Belgium direct nasty chants at Anton Ferdinand and a police investigation into the England captain gathers pace. In the middle: Fabio Capello, who wandered into John Terry's movie three years ago and can find no way out.
    In a gentler age Barking sent the great Bobby Moore to lead England under Alf Ramsey's management. From a street nearby, four decades later, has come a bundle of moral problems. If Sven-Goran Eriksson spent much of his reign deferring to David Beckham, Capello has burned countless hours asking what to do about Terry, whom he consistently venerates as "a leader" and "the biggest personality in the dressing room".
    Over the course of a doomed World Cup campaign and Euro 2012 qualifying these deliberations have encompassed Capello's employers at the Football Association, the hurt feelings of Wayne Bridge, whose former partner Terry allegedly cavorted with, and now Hammersmith and Fulham police, as officers study the alleged slur Terry used against Ferdinand at Loftus Road 12 days ago. All this for a centre‑back whose slip at Stamford Bridge for the fourth Arsenal goal in a 5-3 defeat bore intimations of the physical decline some experts are sure they are seeing.
    Capello's latest Terry-related dilemma is whether to exclude him from the England squad to face Spain and Sweden while the police and FA investigations into the Loftus Road episode remain in progress. All the signs are that Capello will take the safe legal route and not prejudge the Barking barker. He will most likely be included in England's provisional squad subject to any dramatic announcement by the police.
    The temptation not to involve Terry against the world and European champions is obvious. Capello has said he wants to test younger contenders for next summer's tournament. At the back, Phil Jones, Chris Smalling and Gary Cahill are poking through as Rio Ferdinand and Terry resist the ravages of age. Joleon Lescott has held down a regular starting place at Manchester City. In this context alone Terry could be left to perspire at home instead of against the world's best team.
    His talent for wrapping the whole England narrative around his neck is undeniable, and Capello seems powerless to stop it, chiefly because he has bought into the idea of the English stopper-warrior. The manager's excessive faith in Terry's motivational powers reflects the doubts about the mental strength of this England squad held by a mostly Italian coaching staff.
    Wilting under pressure was one of the main crimes diagnosed by Capello and his aides in South Africa. Terry, they believe, is immune to big-game pressure. Even the failed coup d'etat by "JT" after the abject draw with Algeria failed to undermine this rosy impression. After telling the world's press that he planned to confront the manager about tactics and team selection at that evening's team meeting, Terry found Capello waiting for him in the hotel lobby. "I believe there's something you want to say to me," Don Fabio said, and with that the rebellion was killed at birth.
    After Terry had been without the captain's armband for a year, Capello emoted at a media lunch about how much his demoted sergeant had suffered. In an earlier friendly Terry had seen the armband tossed around between players and Capello considered this humiliating for the man he had stripped of the title. "I think one year's punishment is enough," Capello mused.
    The problem was that Franco Baldini, his No2, had already given Rio Ferdinand the clear impression that he and not Terry would be captain for the forthcoming qualifier against Wales in Cardiff. This led to friction between Capello and Baldini and upset Ferdinand, who may be left out of the squad to be announced on Sunday on grounds of diminished form. The obvious potential for conflict between Rio, brother of Anton, and Terry is likely to cause the older Ferdinand to believe he is being kept out of the camp to make Terry's life easier.
    If Capello picks one he ought to call up both, to be scrupulously fair to the Ferdinands. Around the presumption of innocence, though, other winds are blowing. The need to respect legal processes is counterbalanced more and more by the sheer scale of the uproar and the FA's duty to acknowledge the seriousness of the allegation.
    This week Stan Collymore showed 150 racially abusive tweets to a lawyer, who, he says, told him they were "actionable under English law". Anton Ferdinand and Newcastle's Sammy Ameobi were also subjected to racial epithets on Twitter. Another major escalation was some Chelsea fans chanting: "Anton Ferdinand, you know what you are," in Genk – a clear endorsement of the words Terry admits using against Ferdinand at Loftus Road, though he claims to have been refuting the allegation that he had used them in the first place.
    When large numbers of fans line up behind the sentiment expressed by the phrase in question, English football has a problem far greater than Terry's right or otherwise to play for his country against Sweden and Spain. "They respect Terry as a leader, absolutely," Capello said of his players when he restored him to the captaincy, in March. That may still be true, but young black England players especially are unlikely to view him now without a cloud of doubt, unless he is exonerated before the squad assemble on Wednesday.
    Mental images of the footage from Loftus Road are bound to drift through minds while the case remains unresolved. For Capello, facing the maestros of the modern game, there would be no escape from conjecture about what really happened in the QPR‑Chelsea game. For that reason alone he would be within his rights to avoid another sideshow, if he can stress that no implication of guilt is conveyed.
    The momentum, however, is the other way, towards inclusion. In Genk, as much as Loftus Road, that started to feel like the wrong direction

 
[h=1]Friday's gossip column - transfers and rumours[/h]
gossip_466.gif

TRANSFER GOSSIP
Juventus are planning audacious summer bids for Manchester United's Nani and Gareth Bale of Tottenham.
Full story: talkSPORT

Queens Park Rangers are monitoring Jermain Defoe, often left out of the Tottenham first team, and could table an £8m bid for the England striker in the January transfer window.
Full story: Daily Mail

Schalke insist they will not sell Dutch striker Klaas-Jan Huntelaar, a target for Manchester United, who were reportedly set to offer Dimitar Berbatov as part of the deal.
Full story: Metro

Malaga are hoping to sign Chelsea's teenage striker Romelu Lukaku in the January transfer window for the remainder of the season.
Full story: talkSPORT

West Brom are poised to reject loan bids for strikers Marc-Antoine Fortune and Roman Bednar from Doncaster and an unnamed Championship club respectively.
Full story: Daily Mirror

Swedish Under-21 striker Joe Sise has ended his short trial spell at Rangers, who have no plans to offer him a contract.
Full story: Daily Record


OTHER GOSSIP
Spurs boss Harry Redknapp has revealed he suffered chest pains and struggled to breathe whilst running on a treadmill at his Dorset home, but promised to be back on the touchline "in a couple of weeks" after his heart procedure.
Full story: The Sun

England coach Fabio Capello has told Wayne Rooney he will be part of the England squad for Euro 2012 despite being suspended for all three group matches.
Full story: The Sun

Carlos Tevez is planning to take libel action against Sky pundit Graeme Souness in the latest fall-out from the Manchester City striker's non-appearance in the Champions League defeat at Bayern Munich in September.
Full story: Daily Mail

Former England captain Paul Ince says he is convinced John Terry is not a racist.
Full story: talkSPORT

David Beckham has paid tribute to Sir Alex Ferguson, describing him as a "father figure" and thanking him for giving him the chance to play for his "dream club" Manchester United.
Full story: Daily Mirror

Arsenal striker Robin van Persie insists he is happy to be rested regularly to ensure he remains fit throughout the season.
Full story: talkSPORT

Liverpool boss Kenny Dalglish says his team are better equipped to deal with the absence of Steven Gerrard and Jamie Carragher than last season, but admits he would prefer to see both of them back in the starting line-up.
Full story: Daily Mirror

West Ham midfielder Julien Faubert is set to pledge his long-term future to the club, only months after saying he wanted to leave Upton Park.
Full story: talkSPORT

Hearts have promised to pay the missing wages of their players next week although the squad have opted to delay a formal complaint to the Scottish Premier League.
Full story: Daily Record

AND FINALLY
Ghanaian international Samuel Inkoom received one of the more unusual red cards when he was booked for a second time after taking his shirt off as he left the field, having been substituted for Dnipro in a Ukrainian Premier League match.
Full story: Metro

Tottenham are still 9-1 joint favourites for the Europa League despite suffering their first loss in the competition with a 1-0 defeat in Rubin Kazan, when Kevin Bond and Joe Jordan took charge of the team in the absence of the recuperating Harry Redknapp.
Full story: Racing Post
 

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FOOTBALL
It's been a fairytale - Ferguson


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Manchester United manager Sir Alex Ferguson describes his 25 years in charge at the club as "a fairytale".
Ferguson - 25 years at Man Utd

Ferguson on 'fairytale' years

Top names pay tribute

Archive: Ferguson starts out

Beckham 'honoured' to play under Ferguson

Ferguson departure 'unthinkable'
Hansen hails Ferguson
 
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