A Harry Novillo brace helped Melbourne City to a 5-1 disposal of Central Coast to surge to fourth on the A-League ladder. John Van ‘t Schip’s men on Thursday night became the first team in A-League history to score five goals in consecutive games with Bruno Fornaroli, Stefan Mauk and Aaron Mooy also netting.
A reduced crowd of 4,514 turned out at Central Coast Stadium in the first of a league-wide protest against Football Federation Australia. Active supporter group the Yellow Army had “Gone to the pub”, according to the banner left in their bay, while the regular brass band did not play.
The rest witnessed a manic match in which the Mariners struggled without suspended captain Nick Montgomery. The Scot’s absence left 20-year-old Harry Ascroft with the unenviable task of marking Mooy.
Mitch Austin had clearly been itching to return after a game out with a foot injury, the 24-year-old executing bursting runs down the park. And the Mariners created chances, but their attacking play left them hopelessly exposed on the counter-attack.
City smelled blood. An error from defender Jacob Poscoliero only aided the visitors’ cause as Fornaroli sashayed on the counter-attack and crossed for Novillo to finish crisply.
It was on the cusp of half-time that Fornaroli stretched the margin with his seventh goal in nine games. Jack Clisby found Novillo, who tapped to Fornaroli on the left flank. He could have simply had a shot, but the Uruguayan displayed excellent decision-making to thread a delicious pass to Erik Paartalu, before receiving the ball again at a more-inviting angle to put away.
The Mariners went close after the break when Nick Fitzgerald fired a bullet from the edge of the area that forced City goalkeeper Thomas Sorensen to stretch fingertips.
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However, another defensive error gifted City the ball inside Central Coast’s third and Novillo capitalised, sending it whistling across the face of goal and into the corner out of keeper Paul Izzo’s reach.
They weren’t done yet. Once Ascroft was subbed off, a freed-up Mooy made his move, flitting down the right and crossing with precision for Mauk to ram home.
The Mariners were down to 10 men for the final 13 minutes after a groggy Storm Roux was guided off the field with suspected concussion. It seemingly didn’t matter, with Austin finally getting his moment after earning a penalty kick that he had no problem converting for the Mariners’ sole consolation.
And in time added on, Mooy couldn’t stay out of the action, slamming one into the roof of the net.
Dec 3, 2015
Nov 8, 2015
Crystal Palace’s Scott Dann rises highest to down Liverpool
“You must be sick of us,” the Crystal Palace fans sang, and Liverpool could only concur. Alan Pardew’s team inflicted the first defeat of the Jürgen Klopp era with their third consecutive Premier League victory over the men from Anfield. One month into the job and Klopp is au fait with Liverpool’s problem club.
Goals from the excellent Yannick Bolasie and Scott Dann, a former Anfield season-ticket holder, gave Palace their latest Merseyside triumph. Pardew has now been involved in all three of Palace’s league wins at Anfield, as a player in 1991 and twice as a manager in 2015, and Liverpool again struggled against his enterprising tactics. Klopp was dismayed by both the outcome and the number of early leavers after Dann scored in the 82nd minute.
The former Borussia Dortmund coach had a point; this was an absorbing contest and Christian Benteke squandered several chances, but the visitors’ defence and counter-attacking play were outstanding. It was the perfect combination for an eye-catching away win.
“We made a conscious decision to take the game to Liverpool,” said Pardew, who had promised his players an extra day off this week in the event of victory. “I said to the players that the problem with this team is it doesn’t trust how good it can be. We proved that when we backed off and allowed Liverpool to dominate but once we went toe-to-toe with them we held our own. It is difficult to do that at these big arenas like Liverpool and Manchester United. In the last two games we have defended brilliantly and it has got us four massive points against two big clubs.”
Steven Gerrard was in the crowd for the first time since departing for Los Angeles and must have had flashbacks to his last appearance at Anfield. Palace started in the same dominant fashion that ruined his Liverpool farewell in May, with Pardew’s deployment of Bolasie alongside Bakary Sako in attack unnerving the home defence.
Bolasie, outstanding in Palace’s 3-1 win last season, once again troubled Liverpool with his pace and touch. Only after the Congo international had given the visitors a deserved lead did Klopp’s team find the urgency, accuracy and energy demanded. They could not sustain it and a potentially serious knee injury to Mamadou Sakho compounded the new manager’s misery. “I would rather lose 4-1 and keep him in the team,” said Klopp about the France defender, who will have a scan on Monday.
Palace punished several defensive lapses from Liverpool in opening the scoring. Sako rode a weak challenge from Alberto Moreno to release Wilfried Zaha down the right. Emre Can made a hash of clearing Zaha’s low cross, Bolasie reacted quicker to the loose ball than Lucas Leiva, captain for the day in the absence of the injured Jordan Henderson and James Milner, and beat Simon Mignolet with an unstoppable finish from 10 yards.
Liverpool looked like a team that had made a 5,000-mile round trip to Kazan in midweek but the breakthrough woke them from their lethargy. Jordon Ibe and Nathaniel Clyne began to dominate the right wing, Philippe Coutinho and Adam Lallana found space behind Palace’s midfield shield and the visitors struggled to break in numbers.
Benteke forced Wayne Hennessey into his first save of the game with a textbook header from Ibe’s corner and wasted a good chance from Lallana’s inviting pass. The equaliser arrived from an excellent team move that sent Klopp high-fiving into the supporters behind his dugout. Ibe released Clyne on the right of the penalty area, Lallana flicked the full-back’s cross towards the far post and, just as he did at Stamford Bridge last weekend, Coutinho brought Liverpool level with an emphatic shot beyond Hennessey.
An open game continued to flow and both sides had cause to regret their finishing in the second half. Benteke, who struggled throughout, shot over from Coutinho’s through ball, headed over from Moreno’s cross and over-elaborated inside the area when put clear by the Brazilian. Sako wasted a better opening for Palace, hitting the side netting from six yards after Bolasie’s break and cross from the right had left the striker with only Mignolet to beat.
Klopp replaced the poor Can with Roberto Firmino and switched to a 4-1-4-1 formation but the changes prompted an improvement only from Palace, who retook the lead with eight minutes remaining. Liverpool fan Dann towered over Firmino to head Yohan Cabaye’s corner goalwards, Mignolet parried the effort but straight back to the defender who steered his second header into the top corner. “Scott had about 15 family members here today,” said Pardew. “I think he has been really underestimated throughout his career but now I manage him I realise how good he is. He was superb in everything he did.”
Goals from the excellent Yannick Bolasie and Scott Dann, a former Anfield season-ticket holder, gave Palace their latest Merseyside triumph. Pardew has now been involved in all three of Palace’s league wins at Anfield, as a player in 1991 and twice as a manager in 2015, and Liverpool again struggled against his enterprising tactics. Klopp was dismayed by both the outcome and the number of early leavers after Dann scored in the 82nd minute.
The former Borussia Dortmund coach had a point; this was an absorbing contest and Christian Benteke squandered several chances, but the visitors’ defence and counter-attacking play were outstanding. It was the perfect combination for an eye-catching away win.
“We made a conscious decision to take the game to Liverpool,” said Pardew, who had promised his players an extra day off this week in the event of victory. “I said to the players that the problem with this team is it doesn’t trust how good it can be. We proved that when we backed off and allowed Liverpool to dominate but once we went toe-to-toe with them we held our own. It is difficult to do that at these big arenas like Liverpool and Manchester United. In the last two games we have defended brilliantly and it has got us four massive points against two big clubs.”
Steven Gerrard was in the crowd for the first time since departing for Los Angeles and must have had flashbacks to his last appearance at Anfield. Palace started in the same dominant fashion that ruined his Liverpool farewell in May, with Pardew’s deployment of Bolasie alongside Bakary Sako in attack unnerving the home defence.
Bolasie, outstanding in Palace’s 3-1 win last season, once again troubled Liverpool with his pace and touch. Only after the Congo international had given the visitors a deserved lead did Klopp’s team find the urgency, accuracy and energy demanded. They could not sustain it and a potentially serious knee injury to Mamadou Sakho compounded the new manager’s misery. “I would rather lose 4-1 and keep him in the team,” said Klopp about the France defender, who will have a scan on Monday.
Palace punished several defensive lapses from Liverpool in opening the scoring. Sako rode a weak challenge from Alberto Moreno to release Wilfried Zaha down the right. Emre Can made a hash of clearing Zaha’s low cross, Bolasie reacted quicker to the loose ball than Lucas Leiva, captain for the day in the absence of the injured Jordan Henderson and James Milner, and beat Simon Mignolet with an unstoppable finish from 10 yards.
Liverpool looked like a team that had made a 5,000-mile round trip to Kazan in midweek but the breakthrough woke them from their lethargy. Jordon Ibe and Nathaniel Clyne began to dominate the right wing, Philippe Coutinho and Adam Lallana found space behind Palace’s midfield shield and the visitors struggled to break in numbers.
Benteke forced Wayne Hennessey into his first save of the game with a textbook header from Ibe’s corner and wasted a good chance from Lallana’s inviting pass. The equaliser arrived from an excellent team move that sent Klopp high-fiving into the supporters behind his dugout. Ibe released Clyne on the right of the penalty area, Lallana flicked the full-back’s cross towards the far post and, just as he did at Stamford Bridge last weekend, Coutinho brought Liverpool level with an emphatic shot beyond Hennessey.
An open game continued to flow and both sides had cause to regret their finishing in the second half. Benteke, who struggled throughout, shot over from Coutinho’s through ball, headed over from Moreno’s cross and over-elaborated inside the area when put clear by the Brazilian. Sako wasted a better opening for Palace, hitting the side netting from six yards after Bolasie’s break and cross from the right had left the striker with only Mignolet to beat.
Klopp replaced the poor Can with Roberto Firmino and switched to a 4-1-4-1 formation but the changes prompted an improvement only from Palace, who retook the lead with eight minutes remaining. Liverpool fan Dann towered over Firmino to head Yohan Cabaye’s corner goalwards, Mignolet parried the effort but straight back to the defender who steered his second header into the top corner. “Scott had about 15 family members here today,” said Pardew. “I think he has been really underestimated throughout his career but now I manage him I realise how good he is. He was superb in everything he did.”
Oct 9, 2015
Ross Barkley shines as England beat Estonia in Euro 2016 qualifying
There is only one small thing that can be held against Ross Barkley after his contribution to England’s latest win and it is that Estonia were obliging opponents for a man desperate to show it is time he is turned into a mandatory first-team pick. All the same, Barkley must have done enough here to make it difficult in the extreme for Roy Hodgson to leave him out. It was his finest night in England’s colours and when Barkley plays with this freedom and exuberance it is easy to see why Hodgson sees flashes of Paul Gascoigne in the Everton player.
Barkley was outstanding, thrilling an impressively large Wembley crowd, and the pass to set up Theo Walcott for England’s first goal – a diagonal 15-yard nutmeg through a congested penalty area – was of that rare variety when it felt like the pot of superlatives might run dry. Suffice to say it was an extraordinary piece of individual brilliance, taking out five defenders with one piece of vision and high skill. Not everything Barkley tried came off but he can be forgiven the odd lapse when he is capable of conjuring up these moments of brilliance and it was exhilarating to see the way he took his chance, as if absolutely determined to show he deserved to be in this team
Twice in the second half he came close to scoring a spectacular goal, on each occasion evading two defenders with that wonderful balance and body movement, before leaving the pitch late on for Dele Alli to make his senior debut. By then England had scored a second goal, created by the substitute Jamie Vardy and turned in by Raheem Sterling, and Hodgson’s team have now won all nine of their qualifiers. They are the only team in the entire process with an immaculate record and a 10th is likely when they wrap everything up in Lithuania on Monday.
Hodgson’s plan in Vilnius is to play a more experimental side, featuring Jack Butland in goal and Jonjo Shelvey in midfield with Phil Jones and Phil Jagielka returning in defence, and five players – Wayne Rooney, James Milner, Michael Carrick, Gary Cahill and Joe Hart – returning to their clubs. Barkley was deployed here in a withdrawn, slightly left-sided position rather than the more advanced No 10 role where he has excelled for Everton this season and Hodgson said that would continue.
Barkley’s involvement always give England a more exciting feel and his contribution was also a reminder that a perfectly executed pass can be every bit as beautiful as a shot into the top corner or a mazy, dribbling run through the opposition defence. It is difficult to remember a more exquisitely delivered nutmeg, or certainly one that doubles up as a defence-splitting through-ball, and perhaps the most impressive part was that when he spotted the chance to go between Karol Mets’s legs it was more than just one-upmanship that compelled him to find the gap.
Barkley played the ball with equal measures of speed and accuracy and suddenly Walcott was six yards from goal with time to control the pass and side-foot his shot inside the far post. It was a wonderful goal and Hodgson, one imagines, will forgive Barkley for the stray pass across midfield earlier in the match, giving the ball straight to an Estonian attacker. Barkley will always be a risk-taker but amid all the acclaim he does need to be aware that, against a better team, that form of carelessness could have left his team in danger.
England had been laboured for much of the first half and there was a slow feel to the game once the home team could not make the most of their early superiority. Perhaps that was just inevitable given that England had qualified for the tournament, chosen their Euro 2016 hotel and arranged most of their warm-up matches while there were still three qualifying games to go. It did, however, make it a prosaic spectacle at times for a crowd that could not even get enthused enough to arrange a proper Mexican wave.
Walcott did at least show signs that he wanted to make something happen, including an early volley that brought a flying save from the goalkeeper, Mihkel Aksalu, and a deflected shot into the side-netting after Adam Lallana’s flick. Overall, though, it was an undistinguished first-half performance and there were even fleeting moments when Estonia abandoned their ultra-cautious approach to break forward. It would be an exaggeration to say Hart’s goal was seriously threatened but it did take an improvised flick from Chris Smalling to turn Konstantin Vassiljev’s left-wing cross behind for a corner.
Estonia quickly settled back into conservatism during the second half, creating little of note and making it difficult to assess the performance of England’s defence. Hodgson’s team were in complete control despite holding only a one-goal lead and Barkley, as Hodgson said, was “strutting his stuff”. One driving run through midfield took the 21-year-old from the centre circle all the way into the penalty area before he was halted. A left-foot shot flashed just wide, then a right-footed effort drew another save from Aksalu.
It was not until the 85th minute, however that England made certain of the victory. Harry Kane, who worked hard in place of the injured Rooney without having one of his better games, flicked on a long goal-kick, Vardy was given the benefit of the doubt after nudging Taijo Teniste to the ground and, running in from the left, squared the ball for Sterling to score from close range.
Barkley was outstanding, thrilling an impressively large Wembley crowd, and the pass to set up Theo Walcott for England’s first goal – a diagonal 15-yard nutmeg through a congested penalty area – was of that rare variety when it felt like the pot of superlatives might run dry. Suffice to say it was an extraordinary piece of individual brilliance, taking out five defenders with one piece of vision and high skill. Not everything Barkley tried came off but he can be forgiven the odd lapse when he is capable of conjuring up these moments of brilliance and it was exhilarating to see the way he took his chance, as if absolutely determined to show he deserved to be in this team
Twice in the second half he came close to scoring a spectacular goal, on each occasion evading two defenders with that wonderful balance and body movement, before leaving the pitch late on for Dele Alli to make his senior debut. By then England had scored a second goal, created by the substitute Jamie Vardy and turned in by Raheem Sterling, and Hodgson’s team have now won all nine of their qualifiers. They are the only team in the entire process with an immaculate record and a 10th is likely when they wrap everything up in Lithuania on Monday.
Hodgson’s plan in Vilnius is to play a more experimental side, featuring Jack Butland in goal and Jonjo Shelvey in midfield with Phil Jones and Phil Jagielka returning in defence, and five players – Wayne Rooney, James Milner, Michael Carrick, Gary Cahill and Joe Hart – returning to their clubs. Barkley was deployed here in a withdrawn, slightly left-sided position rather than the more advanced No 10 role where he has excelled for Everton this season and Hodgson said that would continue.
Barkley’s involvement always give England a more exciting feel and his contribution was also a reminder that a perfectly executed pass can be every bit as beautiful as a shot into the top corner or a mazy, dribbling run through the opposition defence. It is difficult to remember a more exquisitely delivered nutmeg, or certainly one that doubles up as a defence-splitting through-ball, and perhaps the most impressive part was that when he spotted the chance to go between Karol Mets’s legs it was more than just one-upmanship that compelled him to find the gap.
Barkley played the ball with equal measures of speed and accuracy and suddenly Walcott was six yards from goal with time to control the pass and side-foot his shot inside the far post. It was a wonderful goal and Hodgson, one imagines, will forgive Barkley for the stray pass across midfield earlier in the match, giving the ball straight to an Estonian attacker. Barkley will always be a risk-taker but amid all the acclaim he does need to be aware that, against a better team, that form of carelessness could have left his team in danger.
England had been laboured for much of the first half and there was a slow feel to the game once the home team could not make the most of their early superiority. Perhaps that was just inevitable given that England had qualified for the tournament, chosen their Euro 2016 hotel and arranged most of their warm-up matches while there were still three qualifying games to go. It did, however, make it a prosaic spectacle at times for a crowd that could not even get enthused enough to arrange a proper Mexican wave.
Walcott did at least show signs that he wanted to make something happen, including an early volley that brought a flying save from the goalkeeper, Mihkel Aksalu, and a deflected shot into the side-netting after Adam Lallana’s flick. Overall, though, it was an undistinguished first-half performance and there were even fleeting moments when Estonia abandoned their ultra-cautious approach to break forward. It would be an exaggeration to say Hart’s goal was seriously threatened but it did take an improvised flick from Chris Smalling to turn Konstantin Vassiljev’s left-wing cross behind for a corner.
Estonia quickly settled back into conservatism during the second half, creating little of note and making it difficult to assess the performance of England’s defence. Hodgson’s team were in complete control despite holding only a one-goal lead and Barkley, as Hodgson said, was “strutting his stuff”. One driving run through midfield took the 21-year-old from the centre circle all the way into the penalty area before he was halted. A left-foot shot flashed just wide, then a right-footed effort drew another save from Aksalu.
It was not until the 85th minute, however that England made certain of the victory. Harry Kane, who worked hard in place of the injured Rooney without having one of his better games, flicked on a long goal-kick, Vardy was given the benefit of the doubt after nudging Taijo Teniste to the ground and, running in from the left, squared the ball for Sterling to score from close range.
Sep 20, 2015
Lionel Messi scores twice against Levante to keep Barcelona perfect
Lionel Messi celebrates scoring from the penalty spot in Barcelona’s 4-1 win over Levante. Photograph: Susana Vera/Reuters |
Last season’s treble winners lead the standings with 12 points ahead of three teams, including arch-rivals Real Madrid, on 10.
The defender Marc Bartra showed composure to open the scoring by converting a Messi cross after 50 minutes with Barça having been frustrated in the first half by a well-organised Levante side.
After the game opened up Neymar finished clinically after 55 minutes and won a penalty on the hour which was converted by Messi.
At the other end, the Barcelona goalkeeper Marc-André ter Stegen flapped at a cross that allowed Victor Casadesús to slot home after 65 minutes.
Messi blazed a second penalty over the bar after he was fouled but the Argentine did score again with a drive from the edge of the area a minute from time.
Sep 5, 2015
Graziano Pellè leads Italy nearer Euro 2016 with winner against Malta
Italy needed 69 minutes to break down a stubborn, tenacious Malta before Graziano Pellè struck to give them a 1-0 win in their Euro 2016 qualifier.
Italy, without a win in their previous four matches, struggled to find a way through a massed Maltese defence in front of a sparse crowd at the Artemio Franchi stadium.
The win took them top of Group H, with 15 points from seven games, one more than Croatia, who drew 0-0 in Azerbaijan earlier and who were docked a point this summer, pending an appeal.
Pellè, who scored the only goal when Italy won by the same score in Malta earlier in the group, was in the thick of the action for Italy as he had a shot deflected over the crossbar and headed over from a corner early on.
Malta, bottom of the group with one point, nearly took a sensational lead just before the half-hour when Alfred Effiong curled a shot just wide of Gianluigi Buffon’s far post.
As Italy continued to press forward, Pellè headed wide from an Andrea Pirlo free-kick and then the Malta goalkeeper Andrew Hogg did well to parry away Andrea Bertolacci’s deflected shot. Eder had Italy’s best first-half effort when his low effort went just wide of the post after a run from midfield.
Malta continued to defend tenaciously after half-time and Italy struggled to create openings, despite their overwhelming dominance.
Manolo Gabbiadini was agonisingly close to the breakthrough when he curled a 20-yard effort against the crossbar in the 59th minute and Malta finally capitulated 10 minutes later. Antonio Candreva sent over a cross from the right, Hogg was distracted by Marco Parolo at the near post and Pellè forced the ball in from close range.
Even after the goal, Malta continued to defend doggedly and Hogg did well turn away an awkward shot by Parolo.
Graziano Pellè celebrates after scoring in the Euro 2016 qualifier against Malta. Photograph: Giampiero Sposito/Reuters |
The win took them top of Group H, with 15 points from seven games, one more than Croatia, who drew 0-0 in Azerbaijan earlier and who were docked a point this summer, pending an appeal.
Pellè, who scored the only goal when Italy won by the same score in Malta earlier in the group, was in the thick of the action for Italy as he had a shot deflected over the crossbar and headed over from a corner early on.
Malta, bottom of the group with one point, nearly took a sensational lead just before the half-hour when Alfred Effiong curled a shot just wide of Gianluigi Buffon’s far post.
As Italy continued to press forward, Pellè headed wide from an Andrea Pirlo free-kick and then the Malta goalkeeper Andrew Hogg did well to parry away Andrea Bertolacci’s deflected shot. Eder had Italy’s best first-half effort when his low effort went just wide of the post after a run from midfield.
Malta continued to defend tenaciously after half-time and Italy struggled to create openings, despite their overwhelming dominance.
Manolo Gabbiadini was agonisingly close to the breakthrough when he curled a 20-yard effort against the crossbar in the 59th minute and Malta finally capitulated 10 minutes later. Antonio Candreva sent over a cross from the right, Hogg was distracted by Marco Parolo at the near post and Pellè forced the ball in from close range.
Even after the goal, Malta continued to defend doggedly and Hogg did well turn away an awkward shot by Parolo.
Aug 19, 2015
Manchester United make move to sign Sadio Mané from Southampton
Manchester United have made a surprise inquiry for Southampton’s Sadio Mané, with Louis van Gaal wanting the 23-year-old to strengthen his forward line.
United had proposed to buy Pedro from Barcelona but the deal broke down, with Van Gaal instructing Ed Woodward, the executive vice-chairman, to ask Saints about Mané. Pedro is now set to join Chelsea.
The west London club came close to signing Pedro in January and continued to pursue the forward at the start of the summer window before it seemed Pedro had decided he preferred United.
While United insist that it was Van Gaal who decided against triggering Pedro’s £21.2m release clause, as reported by the Guardian last Friday, the 28-year-old had reservations regarding Van Gaal’s managerial style. Pedro is good friends with Víctor Valdés, with whom the Dutchman has fallen out.
Last season Mané caught the eye by scoring the fastest hat-trick in Premier League history, doing so in the 6-1 defeat of Aston Villa in May. The Senegalese scored 10 goals for Saints after arriving from Red Bull Salzburg on transfer deadline day last September.
Ronald Koeman, the Southampton coach, sanctioned an £11.8m fee for Mané so United can be expected to have made an intial bid in the region of £15m for him. Mané has 22 Senegal caps and played at the Africa Cup of Nations in Equatorial Guinea in January.
United had proposed to buy Pedro from Barcelona but the deal broke down, with Van Gaal instructing Ed Woodward, the executive vice-chairman, to ask Saints about Mané. Pedro is now set to join Chelsea.
Sadio Mané, the subject of Manchester United interest. Photograph: James Marsh/BPI/Rex Shutterstock |
While United insist that it was Van Gaal who decided against triggering Pedro’s £21.2m release clause, as reported by the Guardian last Friday, the 28-year-old had reservations regarding Van Gaal’s managerial style. Pedro is good friends with Víctor Valdés, with whom the Dutchman has fallen out.
Last season Mané caught the eye by scoring the fastest hat-trick in Premier League history, doing so in the 6-1 defeat of Aston Villa in May. The Senegalese scored 10 goals for Saints after arriving from Red Bull Salzburg on transfer deadline day last September.
Ronald Koeman, the Southampton coach, sanctioned an £11.8m fee for Mané so United can be expected to have made an intial bid in the region of £15m for him. Mané has 22 Senegal caps and played at the Africa Cup of Nations in Equatorial Guinea in January.
Jul 14, 2015
Manchester City hope £49m Raheem Sterling can sprinkle some stardust
Manchester City required a signing with the wow factor and £49m Raheem Sterling fits the bill. Photograph: Andrew Yates/Reuters |
Rewind to 2007, the age of Sven-Göran Eriksson, Thaksin Shinawatra and a curious and half-baked first attempt at an internationally owned City revamp. The club blew about £40m on a range of players that summer, the most expensive of whom was Bianchi, a 6ft 2in striker who joined from Reggina for £8.8m. He scored on his debut as it happened but optimism soon fizzled out. By January he was so unsettled he was allowed to leave and he returned to Italy to pick up a modest career.
Recalling the tale of Bianchi brings context as City part with £49m to welcome their prime summer target, Raheem Sterling. The fact that their bartering with Liverpool scaled such expensive peaks reflects how remarkably difficult it is for any club – even one with huge financial backing – to recruit what could be defined as A-list talent.
Sterling may turn out to be worth every single one of the many pennies required for Liverpool to release the 20-year-old, and, equally, supposedly surer things than he have turned out to be very costly failed experiments. But it does feel as if part of the package was that City required a signing with wow factor this summer – something to turn heads, create new energy, attract a spotlight.
Considering how City are obviously regarded as major players in the transfer game, having spent about £500m on fees during the years the club has been bankrolled by Sheikh Mansour bin Zayed al-Nahyan, they have not bought too many players classified as established A-listers at the time of purchase.
The best examples of players in that bracket – coveted across Europe’s elite, the kind of name which adds stature to a club and is a barometer for excellence and ambition – are Yaya Touré and Carlos Tevez in 2009, and Sergio Agüero in 2011. Robinho, Vincent Kompany, David Silva and Mario Balotelli were all signings who also caught the imagination on a grand scale in the early years of the City renaissance, even if not all of them worked out.
These were players who enabled the City reinvention to gain an injection of high-calibre credibility. But interestingly, none of the signings since Agüero arrived four years ago have had A-list impact.
Last season’s major purchases, Fernando, Eliaquim Mangala and, as of last January, Wilfried Bony have not yet pulled up trees. Two or three seasons ago Stevan Jovetic, Javi García, Matija Nastasic and Jack Rodwell arrived with optimism but found it difficult to blossom at the Etihad. Álvaro Negredo came, had a stunning spell, dipped and went. Jesús Navas is wonderful only in gossamer flashes and has not lived up to the billing that he could become one of the great wingers of his time.
While the financial fair play sanctions City received last summer had an effect, it is still curious that the club’s ability to attract major talent, a touch of galáctico gloss, in the first half of the Sheikh Mansour era has not been matched in the second half.
Buying top-echelon players, even for rich clubs, is just not that easy and one of the reasons for that – not that the game would care to admit it – is that the pool of outstanding talent looks worryingly parched around the edges. Consider how the other most jaw dropping of transfers so far to improve the Premier League’s top four teams are Bastian Schweinsteiger (almost 31 years old) and Petr Cech (33), with the intrigue of what Sterling and Memphis Depay can do offering the hope of youthful dazzle.
One can debate until deadline day whether the heavyweight bucks are appropriate for a player in Sterling’s developmental stage – part of his attraction is the feeling that there could be so much more to come – but there is not much arguing with market forces.
Marquee signings, of course, are not always what they are cracked up to be. When Manchester United spent nearly £60m on Ángel Di María a year ago, they were obviously hoping for more than a fitful season where delightful moments were mixed with underwhelming drifting. Even if it turns out to be a season of adjustment, it was not easy for club or player to confront difficulties when that kind of price tag turns a dark cloud into a thunderstorm.
With transfer figures as volatile as they are, football is full of such awkwardness. Arsenal’s first year with Mesut Özil was tricky. The experience of the former Chelsea striker Fernando Torres seldom shook off that perplexing air. It seems incomprehensible that Tottenham spent £26m on Roberto Soldado. These, remember, all arrived in their mid-20s with a bit of life experience behind them.
For City Sterling may not be the finished article but they are gambling that, if and when he is, he will possess that aura, that sprinkling of stardust, that hovers around the very best.
Jun 30, 2015
Sergio Ramos tells Real Madrid he wants to leave for Manchester United
Sergio Ramos would like to leave the Bernabéu for Old Trafford, despite being under contract at the La Liga club for another two years. Photograph: BPI/Rex Shutterstock |
Ramos has been informed by Real Madrid that they received a formal bid from United valued at £28.5m (€40m) and that he has told the club he wants to leave this summer. The 29-year-old also informed Real that he is only interested in joining United, despite interest from Manchester City, according to Sky Sports.
United are determined to sign Ramos and made a bid prior to the player meeting the Madrid chief executive, José Ángel Sánchez, last week. The Spanish club continued to say they had not yet any offers. There has been no follow up bid thus far.
During the meeting, held at the club’s Valdebebas headquarters, Ramos confirmed to Madrid that he intended to leave and asked them to listen to offers.
A conversation with the club’s president, Florentino Pérez, followed but there has been no reconciliation. Neither the player nor the club have made any public statement.
Madrid did not adopt the standard response, which is to insist that the player would only leave if United met the full value of his buy-out clause which stands at €180m, but they do value him prohibitively high, setting the price close to €100m. United are determined to use David de Gea as leverage and are prepared to prevent the Spanish goalkeeper from leaving this summer.
Ramos has two years remaining on his contract but negotiations for a renewal have reached a stalemate. He earns around €6m a year, but this is not just a tactic designed to draw a better offer from Madrid. The relationship between Madrid and the player’s camp is extremely tense and although it is impossible to predict how this will end, Ramos’s determination to leave is real.
Jun 15, 2015
Wayne Rooney’s character lauded by Roy Hodgson after England win
Roy Hodgson praised Wayne Rooney’s strength of character after his captain
retained his composure following a series of missed chances, and his discipline
having been elbowed, to conjure the winner which hauled him level with Gary
Lineker as England’s joint second-leading scorer.
Rooney, floored by Bostjan Cesar’s flailing arm moments earlier, pounced on Bojan Jokic’s mistake four minutes from time to slide his 48th goal for his country beyond Samir Handanovic and maintain England’s perfect record in Group E. The 29-year-old is one shy of Sir Bobby Charlton’s record, with San Marino awaiting in September when qualification can effectively be secured. His eight goals in 10 internationals have contributed heavily to the side’s unbeaten record this season.
The Manchester United striker had missed a flurry of opportunities earlier in a frantic contest illuminated by Jack Wilshere’s first goals for the national side. “Wayne Rooney’s performance says a lot of things about him as a man,” said Hodgson. “Just before he took that chance he had taken a nasty blow from an elbow, which could have decked many a player and led to him losing his discipline. But it didn’t and he simply got up and played on.
“The fact one or two chances had gone begging earlier also didn’t worry him because, when the ball fell to him four minutes from the end, he still stuck it away with aplomb. We can rely on that man. I’d have liked him to get a hat-trick today so all the talk of the record would have been finished, but he has plenty of time on his side to achieve that still.”
Lineker was quick to congratulate Rooney, who now boasts 28 goals in qualification games for the World Cup or European Championships, on his achievement. “I’m pleased to be joined by Wayne Rooney on 48 goals,” he said. “It seemed, during a five-minute spell in the second half, it might not happen when he struck two over the bar, but Wayne’s been a consistently excellent player over the years.
“I’m sure he will go on and surpass the great Sir Bobby Charlton. He’s still only 29 and he’s a formidable talent and he has a fabulous goalscoring record, especially in qualifiers.”
Cesar was not cautioned for the elbow flung at the striker as the captains clashed inside the penalty area just after Slovenia’s equaliser, which had tied the game at 2-2. The pair had tangled once before, in a friendly at Wembley in 2009 when the England striker had won a penalty despite appearing to connect heavily with Cesar’s ankle. The Slovenian was booked and had subsequently spent a lengthy spell on the sidelines, describing the tackle as “stupid, stupid foul” at the time.“We thought it could have been a penalty,” said Hodgson of the incident in Ljubljana. “But the referee handled the game well. Slovenia are a strong, physical, aggressive team: Fabian Delph took an elbow to his jaw and Raheem Sterling a nasty kick at the end of the game as well. But the players showed their resilience. The team spirit is getting better all the time. They didn’t leave much on the field in terms of effort and determination.”
While there was frustration at the nature of the first-half goal which meant England trailed at the break, stemming as it did from a Phil Jones throw-in deep in Slovenia’s half, Hodgson was hugely encouraged by the recovery mounted courtesy of Wilshere’s eye-catching brace. “His whole performance was quality,” said the manager. “I’m very happy with the goals he’s scored but, in the second half in particular, he controlled that midfield. If we can keep him fit and he can get plenty of PL [Premier League] matches and international matches, at his young age we think we’ve got a good player going forward. “We know we have excellent technicians in midfield in Wilshere, Jordan Henderson and Delph, James Milner and Adam Lallana, and that they’ve all got goals in them. Now they have to prove it. We’ll need their goals. We can’t just rely on our front players.”
The win means England have now gone 11 games unbeaten since their elimination from the World Cup in Brazil last June, with this their first season without defeat since 1990-91.
“The team has made progress,” added Hodgson. “It’s a good achievement, completing a season of 10 games with eight wins and two draws. That’s not been done for over 20 years. The players deserve some credit for that, and get plenty of credit from me. Now we have to keep building on it. We want to keep that unbeaten run going.”
Rooney, floored by Bostjan Cesar’s flailing arm moments earlier, pounced on Bojan Jokic’s mistake four minutes from time to slide his 48th goal for his country beyond Samir Handanovic and maintain England’s perfect record in Group E. The 29-year-old is one shy of Sir Bobby Charlton’s record, with San Marino awaiting in September when qualification can effectively be secured. His eight goals in 10 internationals have contributed heavily to the side’s unbeaten record this season.
The Manchester United striker had missed a flurry of opportunities earlier in a frantic contest illuminated by Jack Wilshere’s first goals for the national side. “Wayne Rooney’s performance says a lot of things about him as a man,” said Hodgson. “Just before he took that chance he had taken a nasty blow from an elbow, which could have decked many a player and led to him losing his discipline. But it didn’t and he simply got up and played on.
“The fact one or two chances had gone begging earlier also didn’t worry him because, when the ball fell to him four minutes from the end, he still stuck it away with aplomb. We can rely on that man. I’d have liked him to get a hat-trick today so all the talk of the record would have been finished, but he has plenty of time on his side to achieve that still.”
Lineker was quick to congratulate Rooney, who now boasts 28 goals in qualification games for the World Cup or European Championships, on his achievement. “I’m pleased to be joined by Wayne Rooney on 48 goals,” he said. “It seemed, during a five-minute spell in the second half, it might not happen when he struck two over the bar, but Wayne’s been a consistently excellent player over the years.
“I’m sure he will go on and surpass the great Sir Bobby Charlton. He’s still only 29 and he’s a formidable talent and he has a fabulous goalscoring record, especially in qualifiers.”
Cesar was not cautioned for the elbow flung at the striker as the captains clashed inside the penalty area just after Slovenia’s equaliser, which had tied the game at 2-2. The pair had tangled once before, in a friendly at Wembley in 2009 when the England striker had won a penalty despite appearing to connect heavily with Cesar’s ankle. The Slovenian was booked and had subsequently spent a lengthy spell on the sidelines, describing the tackle as “stupid, stupid foul” at the time.“We thought it could have been a penalty,” said Hodgson of the incident in Ljubljana. “But the referee handled the game well. Slovenia are a strong, physical, aggressive team: Fabian Delph took an elbow to his jaw and Raheem Sterling a nasty kick at the end of the game as well. But the players showed their resilience. The team spirit is getting better all the time. They didn’t leave much on the field in terms of effort and determination.”
While there was frustration at the nature of the first-half goal which meant England trailed at the break, stemming as it did from a Phil Jones throw-in deep in Slovenia’s half, Hodgson was hugely encouraged by the recovery mounted courtesy of Wilshere’s eye-catching brace. “His whole performance was quality,” said the manager. “I’m very happy with the goals he’s scored but, in the second half in particular, he controlled that midfield. If we can keep him fit and he can get plenty of PL [Premier League] matches and international matches, at his young age we think we’ve got a good player going forward. “We know we have excellent technicians in midfield in Wilshere, Jordan Henderson and Delph, James Milner and Adam Lallana, and that they’ve all got goals in them. Now they have to prove it. We’ll need their goals. We can’t just rely on our front players.”
The win means England have now gone 11 games unbeaten since their elimination from the World Cup in Brazil last June, with this their first season without defeat since 1990-91.
“The team has made progress,” added Hodgson. “It’s a good achievement, completing a season of 10 games with eight wins and two draws. That’s not been done for over 20 years. The players deserve some credit for that, and get plenty of credit from me. Now we have to keep building on it. We want to keep that unbeaten run going.”
Apr 7, 2015
The Raheem Sterling Supremacy is futile – Europe is full of equivalents
English
football may eat its young, but at least it does so with a sense of grand,
banquet-hall theatre. What stage are we at now in the collective devouring of
Raheem Sterling? Stuffed and filleted, a single caramelised Braeburn clenched
between his teeth, Sterling has spent the last few days nudging his way a little
further down that familiar digestive process of hope, hype and fruitless
backlash.
This is not the moment to rehearse again the rights and wrongs of Sterling’s contract wrangle, a drama of status and gentlemanly expectation that has already reached Jane Austen-like levels of intrigue. There is though another element in the current drama that stands out a little uncomfortably. Among the assorted soundbites swirling about in the wake of that unauthorised BBC interview it is the regurgitation of Brendan Rodgers’ claim last year that Sterling is “the best young player in Europe” that seems most startling, and indeed illuminating.
So far this point has been picked out only to add fuel to the internecine argument. But stepping away for a moment from the question of how much exactly Sterling deserves to be paid, there is something jarring about this in its own right. The best young player in Europe is an Englishman who has never scored a goal in the Champions League, never won any kind of trophy, and never made any real impact against one of the heavyweights of European or international football. Really?
In Rodgers’ defence it is worth noting Sterling has a greater formal claim on this title than anybody else right now. In December last year he was voted Europe’s Golden Boy, or best player 21 or under, at the head of a 30-man shortlist that also included Calum Chambers, Lazar Markovic, Adnan Januzaj, Luke Shaw and Eric Dier. Previous winners include Lionel Messi, Sergio Agüero and Mario Balotelli. Which gives a fairly clear indication of how seriously such things should be taken: genuine A-grade talent will always out; but the leap up from good to seriously good is often no more than guesswork and faith.
What weight should be given to such a title is another matter. Paul Pogba, for example, is still only 22 and clearly a class above. Is Sterling even the best young player at Liverpool? Philippe Coutinho, a seductively thrilling (if non‑English) attacking talent might have a say in that. As might Jordon Ibe, who has barely played but is probably just as exciting when it comes to a punt on unspent potential.
This is not to denigrate Sterling’s talents. I was there to see probably the best three moments to date in his career, each of them entirely convincing: the goal in the title-decider-that-wasn’t at home to Manchester City, when Sterling seemed to pause time briefly, rearrange his body, tweak Joe Hart’s nose and then tickle the ball into an entirely unexpected part of the goal; the title-clincher-that-might-have-been when he pummelled the ball into the Norwich City net from 30 yards out; and in Manaus, where, as England’s No10, Sterling had a wonderful half-hour, carrying the ball with purpose, twisting and turning with thrillingly muscular intent, and producing an entirely illusory sense of an England team finding a winning gear.
Each time Sterling rose to the occasion where others shrunk. He is adaptable, intelligent and blessed with real speed and strength. Against this he has done pretty much nothing of any note so far. His career is a series of nice moments, with almost no imprint outside the Premier League. It is even tempting to conclude there is something slightly illusory about his appeal. Sterling looks so brilliantly upright in possession. There is a charm to his manipulation of the ball and his fine touch that so far exceeds his basic effectiveness.
All of which is to be expected. Sterling is 20 years old. Only in the overheated Premier League could a series of promising moments lead to some apparently serious talk of a £50m transfer fee. The real point here is that beyond the island borders of the World’s Most Excitable League, European football is awash with equivalent fine young talent in Sterling’s part of the pitch. Various factors, among them an easing of concussive tackling and the emphasis on finding space in an increasingly suffocating top tier game, have contributed to making players in Sterling’s position key to the modern game.
As a result, fine-touch attacking midfielders are frankly crawling out of the walls in Europe’s top leagues (never mind Brazil and Argentina, the historic cradle of the No10). The No10 is the position of choice in the Bundesliga, where even the current fifth-placed club, Schalke, have a pair of young creative players at least as good in Max Meyer and the excellent but injury-prone Julian Draxler, who tortured Chelsea’s midfield for half an hour at Stamford Bridge last autumn.
Beyond this can anybody say with any certainty that Sterling is better than
Mateo Kovacic, Hakan Calhanoglu, Memphis Depay, Paulo Dybala, Alen Halilovic,
Davy Klaassen, Nikola Ninkovic or Jesé Rodríguez? Is he a better prospect than
Martin Odegaard, Real Madrid’s performing teenager? Is he actually better than
Alex Oxlade‑Chamberlain, Ross Barkley, and Harry Kane? Maybe he is right now.
Maybe not next month. It is a meaningless, unanswerable question, an argument
about possibility and potential, and a crown that can only really be awarded in
retrospect.This is not the moment to rehearse again the rights and wrongs of Sterling’s contract wrangle, a drama of status and gentlemanly expectation that has already reached Jane Austen-like levels of intrigue. There is though another element in the current drama that stands out a little uncomfortably. Among the assorted soundbites swirling about in the wake of that unauthorised BBC interview it is the regurgitation of Brendan Rodgers’ claim last year that Sterling is “the best young player in Europe” that seems most startling, and indeed illuminating.
So far this point has been picked out only to add fuel to the internecine argument. But stepping away for a moment from the question of how much exactly Sterling deserves to be paid, there is something jarring about this in its own right. The best young player in Europe is an Englishman who has never scored a goal in the Champions League, never won any kind of trophy, and never made any real impact against one of the heavyweights of European or international football. Really?
In Rodgers’ defence it is worth noting Sterling has a greater formal claim on this title than anybody else right now. In December last year he was voted Europe’s Golden Boy, or best player 21 or under, at the head of a 30-man shortlist that also included Calum Chambers, Lazar Markovic, Adnan Januzaj, Luke Shaw and Eric Dier. Previous winners include Lionel Messi, Sergio Agüero and Mario Balotelli. Which gives a fairly clear indication of how seriously such things should be taken: genuine A-grade talent will always out; but the leap up from good to seriously good is often no more than guesswork and faith.
What weight should be given to such a title is another matter. Paul Pogba, for example, is still only 22 and clearly a class above. Is Sterling even the best young player at Liverpool? Philippe Coutinho, a seductively thrilling (if non‑English) attacking talent might have a say in that. As might Jordon Ibe, who has barely played but is probably just as exciting when it comes to a punt on unspent potential.
This is not to denigrate Sterling’s talents. I was there to see probably the best three moments to date in his career, each of them entirely convincing: the goal in the title-decider-that-wasn’t at home to Manchester City, when Sterling seemed to pause time briefly, rearrange his body, tweak Joe Hart’s nose and then tickle the ball into an entirely unexpected part of the goal; the title-clincher-that-might-have-been when he pummelled the ball into the Norwich City net from 30 yards out; and in Manaus, where, as England’s No10, Sterling had a wonderful half-hour, carrying the ball with purpose, twisting and turning with thrillingly muscular intent, and producing an entirely illusory sense of an England team finding a winning gear.
Each time Sterling rose to the occasion where others shrunk. He is adaptable, intelligent and blessed with real speed and strength. Against this he has done pretty much nothing of any note so far. His career is a series of nice moments, with almost no imprint outside the Premier League. It is even tempting to conclude there is something slightly illusory about his appeal. Sterling looks so brilliantly upright in possession. There is a charm to his manipulation of the ball and his fine touch that so far exceeds his basic effectiveness.
All of which is to be expected. Sterling is 20 years old. Only in the overheated Premier League could a series of promising moments lead to some apparently serious talk of a £50m transfer fee. The real point here is that beyond the island borders of the World’s Most Excitable League, European football is awash with equivalent fine young talent in Sterling’s part of the pitch. Various factors, among them an easing of concussive tackling and the emphasis on finding space in an increasingly suffocating top tier game, have contributed to making players in Sterling’s position key to the modern game.
As a result, fine-touch attacking midfielders are frankly crawling out of the walls in Europe’s top leagues (never mind Brazil and Argentina, the historic cradle of the No10). The No10 is the position of choice in the Bundesliga, where even the current fifth-placed club, Schalke, have a pair of young creative players at least as good in Max Meyer and the excellent but injury-prone Julian Draxler, who tortured Chelsea’s midfield for half an hour at Stamford Bridge last autumn.
In a sense this is simply part of the wider picture. English football has always been in thrall to individuals rather than teams: the idea of The One, the foundling genius emerging fully formed from some urban dustbin rather than the far more difficult business of carefully structured success. Whereas almost without exception the best footballers in the world over the last 20 years have been part of some coherent and identifiable process. The best thing about the current world champions is not whether Thomas Müller is the best gangly, awkward, hyper intelligent space-interpreting semi-targetman in the world (he is), but that a system has borne fruits, producing not the occasional standout genius but a generation of brilliantly modern footballers.
Sterling may well get the bumper deal he probably deserves in the current market, whether at Liverpool or elsewhere (and Manchester City look the most obvious suckers for a domestic poster boy). But it is worth bearing in mind this is a strictly localised farrago; and that the Sterling Supremacy says as much about the rarity of such home reared talents in the Premier League as it does about an agent with eye on the main chance.
Mar 9, 2015
Danny Welbeck’s happy return gives Arsenal victory over Manchester United
For Louis van Gaal, it was an ignominious way to confirm there will be no trophy in his first season at Manchester United. His team fell way short, and the indignities were considerable bearing in mind the identity of the player who scored the decisive goal and the various sub-plots provided by the expensive recruits who were supposed to put a fallen team back on a steep, upward trajectory.
Danny Welbeck will certainly have relished his goal given Van Gaal’s unflattering remarks after showing him off the premises last autumn, and Arsène Wenger made a clever decision to entrust him with the central striker role, knowing that he would have a point to prove against his former club. Arsenal were sharper in attack but, just as importantly, less accident-prone on a night when their opponents defended with something bordering on recklessness.
Van Gaal was agitated enough to make a rare excursion to the technical area, and he must have been startled by his team’s lack of care on another unhappy occasion for Ángel di María, sent off for an act of dim-wittedness as United went huffing and puffing after an equaliser.
Di María’s first yellow card was for diving and the second followed moments later, when he took umbrage with the decision, clipped the referee, Michael Oliver, on his back and had a little pull of his shirt. It was a split-second of stupidity that should embarrass the most expensive player in Britain, and the low point in a season that has become a personal ordeal. Radamel Falcao, meanwhile, could not even get off the bench and there was a moment of tragi-comedy afterwards when Van Gaal defended the on-loan striker, signed to replace Welbeck, by pointing out that he had scored four goals and “stimulated” the other players. Who did he mean? United, once again, wore a dishevelled look and it was bordering on desperation when the substitute Adnan Januzaj was booked for another dive.
Arsenal did not have to resort to duplicity. They won because they passed the ball more effectively. They made fewer errors and played with superior intelligence. Santi Cazorla refused to be dragged down by the frequency of the mistakes elsewhere. Francis Coquelin stood out again and the movement of their forward line always caused problems. Welbeck might have looked raw at times, conspicuously nervous early on, but he was a tireless runner and the support cast of Alexis Sánchez, Mesut Özil and Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain must have been encouraged by the home side’s vulnerabilities.
The carelessness affected both teams and was due in part to the fact that the pace of the game was so frenetic. That, in turn, made it a far more exciting spectacle than just about everything that has preceded it at Old Trafford this season. Yet it was still strange to see the frequency with which accomplished players lost the ball. It was that kind of night: lots of blood and thunder and a fair amount of thud and blunder, too.
Wayne Rooney’s goal, four minutes after Nacho Monreal had given Arsenal the lead, did at least show that Van Gaal was right to restore him to attack. Yet no team can defend as generously as United and expect to get away with it. Monreal’s goal was a collective failure, but Welbeck’s was a calamity for Antonio Valencia, bearing in mind it came from his scuffed backpass. Welbeck was on the ball in a flash, flicking it one side of David de Gea and running round the other to score into an empty net.
Rooney had taken his goal superbly, reading the flight of Di María’s cross and taking advantage of some poor marking from Laurent Koscielny to flash his header past Wojciech Szczesny. United will also look back on a chance for Chris Smalling, at 2-1, when the defender put the ball over. Smalling, once again, looked conspicuously short of what Van Gaal requires from a thinking man’s team. It has become a recurring theme and he was one of the players implicated in Monreal’s goal.
The only mitigation is that it must have been difficult for Van Gaal to know who to point the finger at first. In those moments we saw Smalling being sucked out of position to the right-back spot, Valencia becoming stranded and Oxlade-Chamberlain expertly eluding Luke Shaw, Ashley Young and Daley Blind before Monreal turned in his pass without anybody tracking his run.
Arsenal lost Oxlade-Chamberlain to a hamstring injury early in the second half, whereas Shaw and Ander Herrera were both removed by Van Gaal during the interval. Michael Carrick was brought on, presumably to help provide some polish in midfield. Yet the lack of composure from United was alarming and, as Van Gaal said afterwards, they were self-inflicted wounds. Welbeck’s goal stemmed from nothing more basic than a long goal-kick from Szczesny. Di María’s meltdown came in the 74th minute and Van Gaal’s verdict – “not so smart” – was being kind bearing in mind he had warned his players to make sure they kept their discipline.
Arsenal had not won at Old Trafford since September 2006 but they played as if affronted by the suggestion they have an inferiority complex against these opponents. It needed another demonstration of De Gea’s brilliance to prevent Cazorla adding a third, and the semi-final draw, pitting Arsenal against Reading or Bradford, completed a hugely satisfying night’s work.
Feb 5, 2015
Liverpool through as Philippe Coutinho breaks Bolton hearts at the death
Exiting on Burnden Way in the 86th minute, back on course for Wembley Way by the 91st, Liverpool rescued their FA Cup prospects with a late flurry of blows that devastated Bolton Wanderers. Cruel on Neil Lennon and his tireless Championship team perhaps, but it was the virtues of patience and class that gave Brendan Rodgers’s men a shot of redemption against Crystal Palace in round five.
Bolton were one goal up courtesy of the 36-year-old Eidur Gudjohnsen’s penalty but a man down following the needless dismissal of Neil Danns as the match entered the final four minutes. The red card proved crucial. With a full complement Bolton held their Premier League visitors at bay, won every aerial challenge and last-ditch intervention inside their area and were on course to continue the fourth-round giant-cull. Liverpool had the space but not the clinical touch to profit. Their nerve, however, eventually told against the 10 men.
Emre Can, pushed into central midfield to capitalise on Danns’ departure, lofted a glorious pass over the Bolton substitute Liam Trotter and Raheem Sterling volleyed in a fine equaliser from close range. The groans from the home supporters about five minutes of stoppage time had not fallen silent when Philippe Coutinho marked his new five-year contract at Liverpool by taking aim from 20 yards and beating Andy Lonergan with a dipping shot in off the crossbar. Reprieve for Rodgers but a night of regret for his fellow Ulsterman in the home technical area.
Lennon was fulsome in his praise of Bolton’s heroic defending with the exception of the lapse in concentration from Trotter that enabled Sterling to level. He was also blunt in his appraisal of the referee Roger East’s performance – “rubbish” – for what he deemed an unjust first yellow card for Danns when he lunged through Joe Allen. “I can understand the sending off but the first one wasn’t a booking. It changed the game,” said the Bolton manager, although his side were the beneficiaries of East’s decision-making when he awarded a soft penalty when Martin Skrtel caught the toes of Zach Clough.
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The Bolton manager felt that playing away from home might suit Liverpool given his team would be inclined to take more risks in the replay and leave more spaces as a consequence. Rodgers claimed the Macron Stadium’s “beautiful pitch” – a point he has stressed about several opposition grounds lately as his frustration grows with the Anfield surface – would also work to side’s advantage. The script never unfolded that way for Liverpool. The task of breaking down a well-drilled, hard-working Championship opponent was just as complicated as at Anfield, and Bolton posed a greater threat on home soil.
Rodgers fielded a strong side despite a Merseyside derby looming at Everton on Saturday and there were nervous moments when David Wheater came through the back of Sterling’s ankles to collect a merited yellow. The Liverpool forward limped on, mercifully to the very end for his side, but Lazar Markovic suffered a back injury that will have to be assessed before the trip to Goodison Park. The biggest selection surprise came from Bolton’s manager who, evidently keen to hustle Liverpool’s back three at every opportunity, deployed the captain Matt Mills at centre-foward instead of in central defence.
Sterling forced Lonergan into a fine low save in the first half and struck a post when Dorian Dervite stood off and invited him to shoot from 12 yards. Wheater headed straight at Simon Mignolet at the opposite end and Gudjohnsen blazed over from Dean Moxey’s inviting cross when he had time and space inside the area for a more composed finish.
Gudjohnsen made amends in telling fashion after the restart although, in truth, Sterling should have beaten the former Chelsea and Barcelona forward to it. Liverpool broke through courtesy of Coutinho’s perfectly-weighted pass to Sterling but Dervite produced an exquisite tackle to thwart the hesitant forward. Sterling had a second bite but his shot towards the top corner was punched away by Lonergan.
For the first time in the game Liam Feeney broke free down the right and delivered a deep cross towards Mills. His knockdown found Clough who took a touch into the area where he was clipped by Skrtel. The referee had no hesitation in pointing to the spot and Gudjohnsen stroked a nonchalant spot-kick down the centre of the diving Mignolet’s goal.
Bolton’s prospect of holding out was dealt a severe blow when Danns was sent off for a second bookable offence, both for late and needless lunges on Allen, yet the home side had chances to double their advantage through Gudjohnsen and Clough. The Icelandic striker headed straight at Mignolet when he should have scored and Clough shot narrowly wide. They were opportunities that Bolton could not afford to miss. The pressure inevitably intensified from Liverpool.
Can had a shot deflected just wide and another tipped superbly on to the bar by Lonergan. Henderson’s half volley was diverted against a post by Wheater before Can found Sterling, who equalised in style. The misery was not over for Bolton.
Coutinho collected a pass 20 yards from goal and left Lonergan stranded with a shot that looped over and in off the underside of the bar.
Jan 7, 2015
Oldham confirm Ched Evans is expected to sign by early next week
The owner of Oldham Athletic, Simon Corney, believes there is an “80% chance” his League One club will sign the convicted rapist Ched Evans. The businessman argues the 26-year-old striker, who served half of a five-year prison sentence for an offence committed in 2011, deserves a chance to resume his career. “We believe he has served his time,” Corney told the Jewish Chronicle. “There is an 80% chance of us signing him. It won’t be done today. It’s not straightforward and there are some legal issues.”
The prospect of Evans resuming his career at Boundary Park has provoked a strong reaction, with more than 65,000 people signing a petition protesting against the move and the shadow sports minister, Clive Efford, writing to the Football Association on Wednesday to ask the governing body to intervene to prevent Evans from returning to play football.
“The decision on whether players should return to football after committing serious offences is not a matter solely for individual clubs and I have asked the FA to refuse his registration when Oldham Athletic approach them,” Efford said.
In his letter to the FA’s chairman, Greg Dyke, Efford wrote: “I believe the FA has failed to appreciate the seriousness of the crime for which Ched Evans has been convicted and the consequences that his return to the game will have on people’s impressions of the sport and its governing body.” It is understood, though, that the FA has no rules under which to prevent the registration and Evans would be free to play again.
Corney said he understood the widespread concerns but he claimed the support of three unnamed Premier League managers and added: “I hope people don’t get too carried away and it doesn’t get too hot. I completely understand people’s views and I respect them. I would never tell people they are wrong to have their own views. But we want people to keep them in check.”
Although Corney stated the deal could happen “at any time”, he told the Jewish Chronicle it was likely to be confirmed before the weekend. However, Barry Owen, a board member who backs the signing of Evans on what would be a free transfer, hinted plans were in a state of flux and warned the deal may not be completed until next week. “There are ongoing negotiations with regard to signing Ched Evans,” Owen said. “Unfortunately, quite a lot of due diligence still needs to be completed. We are still in talks with the PFA [Professional Footballers’ Association] and other agencies. At the moment I would just ask you to bear with us. There are things to be done, genuinely, and I don’t anticipate that it is going to be done over the next few days.”
Commercially Oldham have already paid the price for the move to sign Evans. on Wednesday one of the club’s sponsors ended its association. Verlin Rainwater Solutions said: “After receiving the news regarding the imminent signing of Ched Evans it is with great regret that [we] will no longer be associated with Oldham Athletic. We would like to take this opportunity to make clear that we feel Mr Evans should be able to lead a life without further punishment after serving his sentence, although our feelings remain the same that this should not be within the public domain where his previous behaviour may influence the next generation.
“We sincerely wish the club a very successful future and have no regrets about being associated with Oldham Athletic over the past few seasons but feel our continued support would be sending out the wrong message.”
The restaurant chain Nando’s said it would be ending its relationship with Oldham and another sponsor, ZenOffice, is close to following suit, warning that its five-year relationship would be over if Evans signed. A statement from the company said: “This partnership has been based on mutual respect as OAFC did share the same values as ZenOffice, based on family and community. ZenOffice do not agree that the path OAFC are embarking on espouses these values. Therefore it is with much regret that ZenOffice would like to confirm that we will end our association with Oldham if the move goes ahead to sign Ched Evans.”
Oldham’s main sponsor is Sports Direct whose chairman is the Newcastle United owner, Mike Ashley. Although the company has yet to comment on the issue, it is thought Ashley is unconcerned. Mecca Bingo, another Oldham sponsor, threatened this week to withdraw its support. In a tweet it said: “We can confirm [we] will be ending our association with @OfficialOAFC if they sign Ched Evans.”
Corney, whom Oldham’s website states owns “97% of share capital”, purchased the Lancashire club during the 2003-04 season. The consortium was credited with stabilising Oldham, who had been in a difficult financial position and close to liquidation.
Evans, who was convicted of raping a 19-year-old woman in 2012, had been linked with Sheffield United, Hartlepool United, Tranmere Rovers and Malta’s Hibernians before either being turned down or, in the case of Hibernians, prevented from joining by the Ministry of Justice. Northumbria’s police commissioner, Vera Baird, who is from Oldham, called on Ashley to withdraw Sports Direct’s sponsorship if Evans signed. The Greater Manchester police commissioner, Tony Lloyd, said: “It will send out entirely the wrong message if they offer him a contract.”
Evans consistently maintains his innocence. An investigation into his conviction by the Criminal Cases Review Commission is continuing.
Oldham signed Lee Hughes in 2007 after he had been released from prison after causing death by dangerous driving.
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