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Tuesday, July 28, 2009

Mourinho eyes up United job when Sir Alex quits



Jose Mourinho has thrown his hat into the ring to replace Sir Alex Ferguson when he finally leaves Old Trafford.



The Inter Milan boss says he would jump at the chance to fill the Red Devils' hot seat when 67-year-old Ferguson calls time on his glittering managerial career.


After 23 years at United, Ferguson shows no signs of slowing down, but Mourinho says he would love the chance to continue his love affair with English football, if United chief executive David Gill and the board decided he was the right man to take over.


"I would consider going to Manchester United but United have to consider if they want me to succeed Sir Alex Ferguson,'' he told the Daily Mirror. "If they do, then of course.



"I like England, where the fans are very passionate and make the game a beautiful occasion with such an incredible atmosphere.''



The Portuguese coach isn't lacking in confidence and believes he has the right credentials to take one of the most high-profile jobs in world football.



And he took the opportunity to point to his success with Inter Milan, who retained their Serie A title this year, as a contrast to Chelsea's failure to recapture the Premier League title since his departure in 2007.



"I had many conversations before Chelsea and I decided on a divorce,'' he said. "It was difficult for me because we loved each other but the relationship went in one direction and it was best for everyone.




"Since I left I became champion again but they have not been champions again. I keep on winning and they don't.''

Valencia to face Boca


Sir Alex isn’t in the habit of announcing his team too far in advance, but the United boss has confirmed Antonio Valencia will start against Boca Juniors in Munich on Wednesday.




The Ecuadorian winger will pull on a Reds shirt for the first time when United kick off the two-day Audi Cup competition against the Argentinean giants.




“Valencia didn’t join us in the Far East because he was behind the rest of the squad in terms of his fitness,” Sir Alex said.




“He’s been back at Carrington doing his endurance and speed work, catching up with everyone else.”




And although it’s unrealistic to expect Valencia to step straight into Cristiano Ronaldo’s shoes, the United manager is confident he’s found a player who will go from strength to strength.




“We lost Ronaldo in the summer and he’s someone who gave us 26 goals last season. It’s going to be hard to replace him and we hope we can find an answer to that.




“We’ve signed Valencia, who has a lot of potential – he’s young, very athletic and possesses good power. At 23 years of age I think he can develop at our club.”

Monday, July 6, 2009

Anderson: Manchester United Want To Get Owen Back To His Best


Michael Owen is the "pride of the country", according to stocky midfielder Anderson.




Manchester United midfielder Anderson advocates the free acquisition of diminutive goal poacher Michael Owen, and today declared that one of the club's primary intentions is to ensure the former Real Madrid and Liverpool striker returns to his exemplary best.




The burgeoning Brazilian explained to the club's official website, “I am certain that he will help us a lot. He is a player who has played a big part in the history of English football.




“I hope he has more success in Manchester and helps us repeat the excellent season that we had last year.




“Owen is more than just an athlete, he is the pride of the country. Our intention at United is to help him get back to his best.




“We want to have the player who enchanted the world at the beginning of his career.”





It is believed that Owen has taken a drastic pay-cut in order to sign for Sir Alex Ferguson, but partnering Wayne Rooney in attack could help the ageing forward play his way into contention for Fabio Capello's next England squad. The Italian manager has always maintained that the door is open for an Owen return.

Michael Owen Eyes England Role



The new Manchester United striker has a 'burning desire' to get back onto the international bandwagon...




Michael Owen believes his move to Manchester United could re-ignite his international career under England manager Fabio Capello.




The former Liverpool and Real Madrid striker has been starved of opportunities to represent his country, as his injuries have largely coincided with the Italian's reign.




But Owen, who signed for The Red Devils on a free transfer on Friday after his contract at Newcastle United expired, is eager to break back into the international fold with his new club.




"Obviously, if I am fit and playing well, then I have got a better chance of getting back into the England squad and I am sure my team-mates, with their quality, will help me to do that," he told Sky Sports News.




"If I play well, then I'd like to think I can force my way back in. There are internationals coming up and I'd be a fool to say I wouldn't want to be a part of it.




"I think I have 89 caps for England and it would be great to add to that. There is a burning desire to do well for whatever team I play for."




Owen is one of the top goalscorers in England international history, scoring 40 goals in 89 games for his country.

Owen Will Be Better Than Tevez For Manchester United – Glenn Hoddle


Michael Owen will bag more goals for the champions than Tevez ever did, claims the former Tottenham midfielder...




Former England manager Glen Hoddle has insisted that Michael Owen will be a better attacking option than Carlos Tevez for Manchester United.




Owen went from Newcastle United to Old Trafford on Friday in a move that has taken the football world by surprise.




However, Hoddle insisted the transfer would suit Owen perfectly and he tipped the striker to thrive at his new club.




“The way United play will suit Michael down to the ground,” Hoddle told the Sunday Mirror.




“Possession football and a lot of chances. It couldn't be better for him.




“At United, he won't be the focal point of the team. He will have the likes of Rooney, Berbatov and Valencia around him. They are match-winners as well. He will thrive at United.”




Hoddle also insisted that Owen would outscore Tevez, who rejected the chance to stay on at the club and now looks set to move to Manchester City instead.




“It is a superb bit of business by Sir Alex Ferguson. I'm convinced it could be the shrewdest signing of the summer,” he added.




“If Michael can stay relatively fit and be involved in 30 or so games, he can be better for United in front of goal than Tevez.”

I Knew I Would Sign For Manchester United Last Year – Antonio Valencia


Manchester United’s new signing Antonio Valencia has revealed that he has known for some time that he would be moving to Old Trafford.



The winger swapped Wigan Athletic for the English champions last month but, according to skysports.com, he admitted to Ecuardorian television that he had spoken to manager Sir Alex Ferguson about a deal as long ago as last December.



“I knew last December I would be going to United,” the 23-year-old reportedly revealed.




“I had a conversation with Alex Ferguson and he told me once the season was over, he wanted to have me in his squad - I felt honoured.




“What he said was as good as having signed a contract - he does what he says.”




Indeed, United had long been linked with a move for the Wigan man and subsequently paid the Latics £16 million to secure his services.




Valencia has signed a four-year deal at the club and will be joined by fellow new signing Michael Owen, who completed his shock move on Friday.

Wednesday, July 1, 2009

English Angle: He's No Ronaldo, But Valencia Can Make It At Manchester United



He'll never win the Ballon d'Or, but that's not to say United won't keep winning the titles, writes Goal.com's Sulmaan Ahmad.



There's only one Ronaldo, and it's not the Portuguese winker, but what even his most vitriolic detractors must surely recognise is his outstanding individual ability cannot be replicated or replaced by another player on the planet.




Leo Messi may even be superior, but doesn't offer as many options as a forward and, as an adopted Catalan, is one of the few players that can still be considered truly untransferable in world football.




Who else can wreak so much havoc from either wing? Maybe Franck Ribery, but he is nowhere near the same goal-threat.




Who else can combine the pace, power, skill and goals? Kaka, yes, but he is not so effective from wide areas, nor is he on the market, having also found his way to the Bernabeu, alongside CR7 (or CR9, as it is speculated he will soon be known).




Sir Alex Ferguson, blanking one and all streams of speculation from the mass media, has not even considered 'replacing' Cristiano Ronaldo. Even names as big as Franck Ribery and Karim Benzema, though they may have ended up taking the No. 7 shirt, wouldn't have taken CR7's place.




It seems Fergie is adopting a much more low-key route towards rebuilding for life after Ronaldo. Luis Antonio Valencia was confirmed as the first signing of the summer just yesterday, for a rumoured £16m from Wigan Athletic.





This is on a par with Tottenham signing Wilson Palacios - also from Wigan - for £14m in January, a transfer universally criticised but ultimately vindicated, as the Honduras international hit the ground running at White Hart Lane and added an invaluable dimension to the Lilywhites' midfield.





The same can be expected of Valencia. Sir Alex appears to now be favouring the blueprint of his 1999 treble-winners. That was a team - despite the inclusion of Ronaldo's No. 7 predecessor, David Beckham - that was full of hard-workers and level heads. For all of Beckham's fame, he rarely made a scene with a strop quite like Ronaldo.




Valencia can slot in on one wing and develop into a top class player, but never will he be made a star. Like Carrick, like Anderson, even like Berbatov, he will be subject to squad rotation whenever Sir Alex sees fit, and serve as just one of many weapons in United's armoury. Their only guaranteed starter up front is Wayne Rooney, and even he can end up playing anywhere from centre-forward to either wing, whether he likes it or not.





You can guarantee that Fergie will have not once told Valencia he is Ronaldo's replacement. At least one more player will be signed by the Red Devils this summer as they seek to further substitute for the loss of their star man. Karim Benzema looks to have slipped through their fingers, as Real Madrid moved for the French prodigy after Valencia (that's the club, this time) refused to sell David Villa.




Next on Ferguson's list, if you believe what you read, is Sergio Aguero. Certainly, United could do a lot worse, and El Kun would certainly make a worthy heir to the No. 7. Then again, the least glamorous option, still rumoured to be under consideration at Old Trafford, is Klaas-Jan Huntelaar.





We can't quite even rule out the possibility of Ribery making the move to Old Trafford, although he, like Benzema, has a preference for the Spanish capital, if he is to be released from the clutches of the incredibly bullish Bayern hierarchy.





Whatever happens, replacing Cristiano Ronaldo will not be a simple, like-for-like swapping exercise. Valencia may not quite be in 'youngster' territory any more, but as he is approaching 24 years of age, still has several years ahead of him in which to improve, given the right coaching and the right team-mates. He couldn't ask for much better than Man United, and despite his relatively low profile, the test of time may reveal that United would have struggled to do too much better than Valencia.





After all, this is just the beginning...

Goal.com's Top 10 English Players: Bobby Charlton (1)






We've reached the pinnacle of Goal.com's top 50 countdown of the greatest English players, and the man at number one eptomises both his club and his country: Sir Bobby Charlton.



Robert "Bobby" CHARLTON

Born: 11 October 1937, Ashington, Northumberland

England: 106 caps, 49 goals

Clubs: Manchester United, Preston North End, Waterford United



No-one symbolises English football - or a nation's sporting aspirations and achievements - more than Bobby Charlton. During the 1960s he was the most famous - and popular - Englishman in the world, a byword for sportsmanship and fair play, whose fame and universal esteem were based upon the twin virtues of phenomenal footballing ability and a quintessentially Corinthian spirit.



He was, and remains, English football's ultimate ambassador, with an unsurpassed record of achievement in the game.



That record is impressive enough: Charlton won three Football League championships, the FA Cup, European Cup and World Cup; was Footballer of the Year in both England and Europe; and scored more goals for Manchester United and England than any other player. But it is also the context of his career that made it so unique, poignant and globally admired.




For Charlton was shaped and forever affected by the Munich disaster that decimated an outstandingly vibrant team in which he was a rising star of huge promise. Surviving that horror, he was thereafter burdened with the awful question, 'why me?' - while at the same time becoming the focus of his mentor Matt Busby's determination to rebuild a team that would honour the memory of those who had perished. That he met the challenge with such style and success is why Bobby Charlton is number one among Goal.com’s greatest English players of all time.




Busby said of Charlton, "There has never been a more popular footballer. He was as near perfection as man and player as it is possible to be." Sir Alf Ramsey, England's manager when they became world champions, put it more prosaically, "He was one of the greatest players I have seen, very much the linchpin of the 1966 team. Early in my management I knew I had to find a role suitable to Bobby's unique talents. He wasn't just a great goalscorer, with a blistering shot using either foot. Bobby was a player who could also do his share of hard work."




Charlton was born to play football. It was, quite literally, in his blood. His mother Cissie was one of the Milburns, a footballing clan from the Northumberland mining community. Charlton's grandfather and four of his uncles were professional players, one of them 'Wor' Jackie Milburn, the legendary Newcastle United centre-forward who is deified on Tyneside. Cissie herself was passionate about the game and coached it to children. So it was inevitable that her own sons Bobby and Jack - who forged an illustrious playing career with Leeds United and England - would be footballers.




Bobby grew up supporting Newcastle but was mesmerised by the wizardry of Stanley Matthews, from whom he noted the importance of balance, the timing of runs, and speed over the first 10 yards. He represented England Schools and his potential soon attracted a host of scouts from leading clubs to the Charlton's Ashington home.




He opted to join Manchester United, becoming a 'Busby Babe' as the former Scotland wing-half implemented his vision of a successful club built upon a productive youth system and European competition.




United had won the League in 1955-56, and the following season defied the FA by entering the fledgling European Cup, progressing to the semi-final where they lost to Real Madrid. Charlton was drafted into the team in autumn 1956, appropriately enough against Charlton Athletic, scoring twice on his debut. He won a League championship medal as United retained the title, and also played in his first FA Cup final, though Aston Villa controversially denied United the double.




In 1957-58, their second crack at the European Cup was progressing thrillingly, Charlton scoring twice in a 3-3 draw against Red Star in Belgrade that put them through to another semi-final. Then disaster struck on February 6, 1958, when the plane in which they were flying home crashed in the slush on the runway at Munich, where it had stopped to refuel. As the aircraft broke in two, Charlton was flung from the wreckage, still strapped in his seat. Harry Gregg and Bill Foulkes, heroically pulling survivors to safety, at first thought Charlton was dead. In fact Bobby was suffering from head cuts and shock, and was the first to be discharged from hospital. Seven team-mates died on the runway, and an eighth - Charlton's great friend and hero, Duncan Edwards - died in hospital.




When the seriously injured Busby eventually returned to Manchester, 20-year-old Bobby Charlton became the key figure in his rebuilding plans.




Charlton earned his first senior England cap two months after the disaster, scoring a sensational goal against Scotland. In May he was in the FA Cup final again, as a makeshift United side lost to Bolton. Then he was off to Sweden with the England squad for the 1958 World Cup.



At this stage of his career he was playing on the left-wing, though later he would move to inside-forward and ultimately into the deep-lying centre forward role - essentially an attacking central midfielder - for which he is best remembered.




Busby had said it would take five years to rebuild a winning team, and in 1963 Charlton collected an FA Cup winner's medal as United beat Leicester. The following season, with the dazzling trinity of Charlton, Denis Law and George Best now firmly in place, they finished runners-up to Liverpool in the League; and in 1964-65 were crowned champions again. They repeated the achievement in 1966-67; but in between was the little matter of the World Cup, hosted on English soil.




Charlton hadn’t played in 1958, but was a regular by 1962 in Chile, when England lost to eventual winners Brazil in the quarter-finals. In 1966 he and his team were destined to go all the way. They began inauspiciously against Uruguay, but in the second group game, against Mexico, Charlton lit the fuse of English expectations, firing home a stunner after collecting the ball from deep and running 30 yards with it before letting fly with a thunderbolt.





It was vintage Charlton, a scorer of great goals. Further wins against France and Argentina took England to the semi-final, where Bobby produced possibly his best performance in an England shirt, unsettling Portugal's defence with his runs, spraying passes with precision and hitting both goals in a 2-1 win. In the final against West Germany, Franz Beckenbauer was deployed to try and shackle Charlton's effectiveness; the Englishman edged the contest, and his team - which included brother Jack - lifted the World Cup. Bobby, already England's Footballer of the Year and European Footballer of the Year in 1966, was also voted Best Player of the World Cup.




But if it was a case of job done on the international stage, there was still unfinished business in the European Cup. United's League title in 1965 was their passport back into the competition. They stormed into the last four, thrashing Benfica 5-1 away in the process, with Best and Charlton lighting up Lisbon; but the semi-final took them to Belgrade for the first time since Munich, and they were beaten 2-1 on aggregate by Partizan. The dream was put on hold.





Recapturing the League in 1967 meant the wait would not be long. The quest for the holy grail began with aggregate victory over Hibernian Valletta. Then FC Sarajevo and Gornik Zabrze were overcome, setting up a semi-final with Real Madrid, as Busby told journalists, "I feel this is our year."




United took a precarious 1-0 lead to Madrid for the decisive second leg, and without the injured Law trailed 3-1 at the break. Yet goals from David Sadler and Foulkes rescued the dream in the second-half, prompting Charlton to hail the match as the greatest he ever played in.




May 29 1968 at Wembley was thus United's day of destiny, with Eusebio's Benfica the dangerous and experienced opposition. The Eagles of Lisbon had appeared in four previous European Cup finals, winning two of them. In contrast, this was the first time United - or any English team - had reached the final.




A week before the match, Charlton had broken Jimmy Greaves's record of 44 goals for England when he scored against Sweden; but he hadn't yet scored in United's European Cup campaign. Captaining his team, he rectified that just after half-time with a rare but perfectly executed header from a Sadler cross to put United ahead. But Graca equalised in the 81st minute, forcing extra-time. Mercurial Irishman Best scored a marvellous individual goal, Brian Kidd headed a third, and Charlton hit the fourth to complete Busby's mission ten years after his Babes had been destroyed.





Busby received a knighthood, Charlton was honoured with the OBE, and United reached the semi-finals of the European Cup the next season; but with Busby retiring, the team was heading into decline.




Internationally, Charlton still had the challenge of defending the World Cup to look forward to in 1970. But that Mexican quest foundered against West Germany in the heat of Leon, despite England having led 2-0. Charlton was substituted by Sir Alf, who wanted to save him for a semi-final which the Germans snatched from England with a 3-2 win after extra-time.





Charlton decided to retire from playing at the end of the 1972-73 season. The following year United were relegated. He had scored a record 247 goals for the club in 758 games – an appearance record that Ryan Giggs broke in the 2008 Champions League final. For England, Bobby had made a record 106 appearances (subsequently overtaken by Bobby Moore, Peter Shilton and David Beckham) and scored 49 goals, which remains unequalled.





He took the reins at Preston North End, and played for them in 1974, but realised he was not cut out for management, though he did briefly caretaker-manage Wigan Athletic while on the board there. In 1974 he was awarded the CBE, and in 1975-76 scored 18 goals in 31 appearances for Waterford United in Ireland.





Charlton ran several businesses and established successful soccer schools in the UK and around the world. In 1984, he was invited onto the board at Manchester United, and is still a director. He was instrumental in the appointment of Alex Ferguson as manager in 1986, recognising in the Scot the same skills, drive and vision with which Busby had led United.





Knighted in 1994, in April 2009 he was further honoured when UEFA president Michel Platini presented him with a special award recognising his outstanding contribution to European football. Platini said it was a privilege to present the UEFA President’s Award to an outstanding ambassador and role model who “represents everything that is good about the game of football; fair play, respect, and true loyalty, and is a good example for future generations, both on and off the pitch”.





As for the football, current England coach Fabio Capello recently said Charlton was the one past player he would love to have in his current England squad. "He was a midfielder, a bit like Alfredo di Stefano. He had the same style. He ran a lot. He could defend and attack. Overall, he was a really fantastic player."





The late George Best - a team-mate with whom Sir Bobby had an occasionally fractious relationship - summed up Charlton's ability succinctly, "I've never seen anyone go past players as easily as he did."

Valencia thanks Latics



Luis Antonio Valencia today begins a new life as a Manchester United player, but, before looking ahead to the future, the winger was keen to pay a heartfelt tribute to former club Wigan Athletic.



The Ecuadorian signed for the Reds on Tuesday, bringing down the curtain on a three-year stay at the JJB Stadium, and he admits he is forever indebted to the Latics for giving him his break in English football.



"It is quite simple, I owe Wigan everything," Antonio told the Wigan Evening Post. "Without them, there would be no Manchester United for me. The club has been fantastic for me, and I am genuinely sad to be leaving some fantastic memories and friends behind.


"Of course, I am excited to be joining one of the biggest clubs in the world, but I have to say I owe it all to Wigan. To Paul Jewell, Chris Hutchings and Steve Bruce, I say a massive thank you – and to the chairman Dave Whelan.




"I also want to say a big thank you to (Wigan manager) Roberto Martinez. I think I would have really enjoyed playing for him, but he has not opposed this move and I am grateful for that."

Time to move on



So, farewell then, CR7.

The long goodbye that began in earnest in summer 2008, with Real Madrid’s entreaties, and the drip-drip of public pronouncements from sloganeers, has finally played itself out. The fabled shirt is vacant once more.

For those who mourn the passing of one of the modern game’s finest talents, a word of advice: don’t dab your eyes as he dots the ‘I’s on his new contract. Memories are wonderful and precious things, but that, ultimately, is all they are. They will not win trophies, nor push us forward; and the quest for fresh challenges has always kept Sir Alex one step ahead of the chasing pack.

Manchester United, as the boss has always said, are bigger than one man. A constant summer of constant speculation would have benefited no-one.

We’ve been down this road before, of course. We were told we should never have sold the goals of Ruud van Nistelrooy; that we would never replace David Beckham’s dead-ball expertise, or transplant the lungs and heart of Roy Keane anew. We did and we have. There will be new names to conjure with, new songs to learn and sing.

Of course, we will miss Ronaldo’s quest for invention; yes we will smile fondly as we recall the astonishing, buck-toothed, spaghetti-haired kid who bewildered Bolton’s defence for 29-minutes six summers back. That initial cameo was a performance so dripping with wit and wonder, those fortunate enough to have seen George Best in the flesh were moved to make comparison. Six summers: half a career.


Will he burn brightly enough to score 42 goals in a season in Spain? Who knows? Will he miss the arm of Sir Alex, the paternal, protective touch in those long, dark moments of the soul? Probably. Will we miss him? Yes, of course – those capable of pinging in 40-yarders to order are in short order. But we can and will move on. The adventure continues.




Goodbye Cristiano and good luck. You will live in interesting times; the times you leave behind may yet prove to have been the most interesting.
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