Showing posts with label UTD. Show all posts
Showing posts with label UTD. Show all posts

Friday, 6 July 2012

City and United battle to take Robin van Persie to Manchester

Manchester City are set to battle Manchester United for Robin van Persie's signature

Roberto Mancini, the Manchester City manager, is privately confident that Manchester United do not pose a threat to him buying Robin van Persie, despite the growing sense that Sir Alex Ferguson will make one big move in the transfer market this summer in an attempt to prise back the Premier League title.
City have not yet tabled a bid for Van Persie, their top summer transfer target, though Mancini has no sense that United are preparing to provoke a repeat of last summer's chase for Samir Nasri by making a move of their own. The Premier League champions have felt for several weeks that they are getting close to agreeing personal terms with the Arsenal captain, who has also been shown around houses in the North-west by City.

But despite Mancini's relaxed outlook where last season's runners-up are concerned, United do have the funds for one big-money transfer this summer and Ferguson, who knows that the prospect of taking the title back off City will be vastly more difficult if they have Van Persie, may well argue the case for making the 28-year-old that signing. Though the player's age means that this would be a £20m outlay with minimal sell-on potential, a United side with Wayne Rooney operating behind Van Persie would be dangerous.

United's policy of not paying substantial sums for players who are over the age of 27 goes right back to 1997, when Henning Berg and Teddy Sheringham were the last outfield players of that age – Dimitar Berbatov aside – for whom United have paid more than £3m. But Berbatov proves there can be an exception to the rule and though United are unlikely to match the salary Rooney secured for himself in October 2010, a substantial signing-on fee could ease Van Persie's way to Old Trafford.

Arsenal, who did not move yesterday to speak to Van Persie after his declaration of intent to leave, would be far more willing to negotiate with United than with City – the club to whom Arsène Wenger has declared he would not sell another player.

If United do seek to capitalise on the situation, they may feel they can exploit the gap between Mancini – who once again wants to do early business – and his football administrator Brian Marwood, who must marry the Italian's desire with the strictures of Uefa's financial fair play regime. There is already frustration in the Mancini camp that Marwood is delaying on a formal opening bid for the Dutch striker.

Van Persie's determination to leave provoked the most outspoken attack yet on the Arsenal board by the club's second biggest shareholders, Alisher Usmanov and Farhad Moshiri, who have written to owner Stan Kroenke expressing "deep reservations" about how the American is running the club. Usmanov and Moshiri said in the letter obtained by the Associated Press that a "tight" financial regime is leading to Wenger "selling his best players and having to continue to find cheaper replacements".

Arsenal said last night that the letter, demanding a rights issue to reduce the club's debt and bring in funds, had "been received and the contents considered". But privately, the club are unmoved by this latest attack on their strategy by Usmanov and remain utterly convinced that a self-sustaining financial model is the right way ahead after 15 successive seasons in the Champions League.

Usmanov, who has been resolutely ignored by Kroenke, added: "It appears that a place in the Champions League will be the pinnacle of our achievement again next season. Unfortunately, in the future we may see this ambition lowered further."

Sourced: http://www.belfasttelegraph.co.uk/sport/football/premiership/city-and-united-battle-to-take-robin-van-persie-to-manchester-16181692.html

Sunday, 17 June 2012

The rage within: Rooney claims he's got temper tantrums under control


istake: Wayne Rooney is sent off during the Euro 2012 group G qualifier against Montenegro
Getty
Wayne Rooney today dismissed fears he would be a red-card risk in England's crunch European Championship clash against Ukraine.
Tuesday's final Group D game in Donetsk was expected to see Rooney make his eagerly-anticipated return from suspension after sitting out his country's opening two games of the tournament.
Grown up: Wayne, holding son Kai, and Coleen Rooney out and about on Sunday in Krakow, Poland
Grown up: Wayne, holding son Kai, and Coleen Rooney out and about on Sunday in Krakow, Poland
Andy Stenning
 
Rooney was banned after being sent off for kicking Montenegro's Miodrag Dzudovic during England's final Euro 2012 qualifier in October.
The Manchester United star has a chequered disciplinary record down the years and was red-carded at the 2006 World Cup.
He also lost his temper with England fans during a poor 2010 tournament and, with a hostile atmosphere expected in Donetsk on Tuesday, some have suggested recalling him would be something of a gamble.
However, Rooney has picked up just one yellow card for club and country since October's moment of madness and has only been booked twice all season.
Asked if he needed to channel his aggression in the right way on Tuesday, he said: "I think I have done all season.
"What happened [in Montenegro] was a mistake. I understood that and apologised to the guy. I've paid the price. I've had to take it.
"And I have no problems with my attitude or my temperament. I'm happy and I'm ready to play."
Rooney admitted he feared his suspension - which was originally three matches before a Football Association appeal reduced it to two - would cost him his place in England's Euro 2012 squad.
Waiting game: Rooney reacts during France clash
Waiting game: Rooney reacts during France clash
Andy Stenning
 
"Of course," he said. "Certainly, when it was a three-game ban, I thought I probably wouldn't be here."
Tuesday's match is effectively an away game for England and, with their opponents needing to win to avoid an early exit, the heat will be on.
"It'll be a big challenge," Rooney said. "They'll obviously have the majority of the support and the majority of the fans in the stadium.
"We've been in this situation before. "We've been to a lot of stadiums around Europe and around the world, and we've had to deal with this atmosphere on a lot of occasions.
Sensible: Wayne claims to have tamed the bizarre side of his personality. His haircut suggests otherwise
Sensible: Wayne claims to have tamed the bizarre side of his personality. His haircut suggests otherwise
Reuters
 
"If you look at Turkey away nine or 10 years ago, it was as hostile as you're going to get.
"So we understand there's going to be a big atmosphere and it's something we have to deal with.
"We're big enough and experienced enough to deal with it."
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