Thursday, September 30, 2010

Manchester United and neighbours City in blazing row

Contrasting accounts of the drinks, or lack of them, given to firefighters is the latest unlikely battleground between warring Manchester clubs, United and City. City are claiming firemen who had just spent a number of hours putting out a considerable blaze next door to United's Carrington training ground were told they would have to pay for the drinking water the crew had requested following their thirsty work. The light blue version is that the firemen then knocked on the door of the neighbouring City training ground, where they were given bottled water and a crate of energy drink Lucozade for free.

And City have a letter from the Trafford fire service thanking the club for their hospitality. United, who say the fire was put out with water supplied from a bore hole in their grounds, insist they gave the firemen a free crate of water and also have a thank-you note from the fire crew.
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Wednesday, September 29, 2010

Valencia winger Joaquin led out of Manchester United tie

Valencia will be without the services of winger Joaquin for Wednesday's Uefa Champions League tie against Manchester United at the Mestalla, according to Super Deporte.

Valencia winger Joaquin led out of Manchester United tieThe 29-year-old former Spain international is understood to have picked up a muscle strain during los Che's training session on Tuesday evening and as a result has been withdrawn from the squad to face the Premier League outfit.

Joaquin had been ever-present in Valencia's lineup since the start of the season but was rested for the win over Sporting Gijon at the weekend. The current Primera Division leaders go into the game on top of Group C following an opening day demolition of Bursaspor, with United looking to get their campaign back on track after being held to a scoreless draw by Rangers in their opener a fortnight ago. It is unclear as yet whether Joaquin will be fit for the visit of Athletic Bilbao to the Mestalla on Saturday.
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Tuesday, September 28, 2010

Champions League Preview: Valencia – Manchester United

Champions League Preview: Valencia – Manchester UnitedAfter enduring a frustrating goalless draw at home to Rangers in their opening Champions League fixture, Manchester United face a tricky task away at in-form Valencia as they aim to pick up their first European win of the season.

The Red Devils have been far from convincing so far this season, drawing all three of their Premier League away games, and come into Wednesday’s fixture on the back of a 2-2 stalemate with Bolton Wanderers, a game in which they had to come from behind twice to salvage a point.

That was not the only setback for Sir Alex Ferguson’s men at the Reebok Stadium with both Wayne Rooney and Ryan Giggs picking up knocks which will rule them out of the trip to the Mestalla.

With broken leg victim Antonio Valencia also out, Sir Alex Ferguson has selection dilemmas ahead of Wednesday’s clash and his usually reliable defence may also be giving him headaches, having conceded nine goals in four away games this season.

Setting the pace in Spain Valencia, meanwhile, will be looking forward to the visit of the English side and will be full of confidence after taking 13 points from their opening five games of the season to top the Primera Division ahead of both Barcelona and Real Madrid.

Unai Emery’s side have so far made light of their summer exodus which saw the likes of David Villa, David Silva, Carlos Marchena, Alexis and Nikola Zigic all leave for pastures new.

Yet Valencia still possess a strong squad with Juan Mata, Joaquin, Pablo Hernandez, Ever Banega and David Albeda on the books and new signings Roberto Soldado, Tino Cost, Mehmet Topal and Artiz Aduriz.

Indeed Los Che have already picked up three points in the Champions League with an opening day 4-0 victory over Turkish champions Bursapor and another victory will put them in pole position in the group and favourites to qualify for the next knock out stages.
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Monday, September 27, 2010

Manchester United striker Wayne Rooney can't blame the media, says Kevin Keegan

Rooney, troubled by recent revelations that he slept with prostitutes, produced another below-par performance as United failed to secure their first away win of the season at Wanderers. Former England manager Keegan, who famously clashed with Ferguson in his time as Newcastle manager in the mid-Nineties, said Rooney could not complain about his situation. Following United’s 2-2 draw at the Reebok, Keegan said: “You can’t have all the contracts and sell your wedding to magazines and things like this and suddenly say, ‘That’s the tap I want to turn on, but we want to turn the other one off.’

“But it’s just one tap and I know from when I played that, if you are advertising boots and all these things, you have to go and make appearances. The one thing I would say is keep your home and your family out of it and just take your endorsements if that’s what you want to do. “You can’t turn around and say there’s too much paparazzi around or there is too much publicity. One minute you are courting it, the next minute you’re saying ‘I don’t want this’.

Keegan added: “His performance tells me his confidence is shot. For United to get back to where they should be and winning at places like Bolton, they need to be getting Wayne Rooney firing on all cylinders.United are minus Wayne Rooney at the moment. It’s a different Wayne Rooney this year. It’s not the same. It’s like chalk and cheese.”

Ferguson, who left the Reebok without speaking to United’s own TV channel, MUTV, only discussed Rooney’s fitness in his post-match interview with ESPN, suggesting he would overcome an ankle knock in time to face Valencia on Wednesday.

The United manager said the result highlighted the strength of the Premier League. “That’s the Premier League for you. Teams drop points when you don’t expect them to.

“Away from home this season we have scored seven goals and only got three points. It gives you a measure of the quality in the league.”

Bolton manager Owen Coyle said: “Having led twice, we’re disappointed to have given up those leads but you have to accept the individual quality they have.”
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Sunday, September 26, 2010

Premier League: Bolton Wanderers v Manchester United Preview

There’s yet another North West clash in the Premier League this weekend as Manchester United journey to the Reebok Stadium to take on Bolton Wanderers. The Trotters, now managed by former Burnley boss Owen Coyle, have changed their style significantly from the days of lumping the ball forward and playing the percentage game under Sam Allardyce and Gary Megson. But expect the Red Devils to still have a tough encounter, at a venue where they have often come unstuck in recent years.

United will be buoyed by a 5-2 win at Scunthorpe on Wednesday, which manager Sir Alex Ferguson missed after he decided to go and watch future Champions League group stage opponents Valencia. Hotshot Michael Owen could be in line for a start after bagging a brace in the midweek cup game. Wayne Rooney is certainly off form, a fact which Ferguson has admitted.

But he is expected to play, even with Bulgarian striker Dimitar Berbatov in superb form. Bolton chief Coyle endured a torrid return to Burnley as they were unfortunately paired with his old club in the Carling Cup. He was once again labelled a judas as they were dumped out by the Championship side 1-0.

Bookmakers are expecting Berbatov to continue his hot-streak in this fixture and he is 4/1 with ExtraBet to score first. The game is live on ESPN with kick-off at 12 noon. Odds correct at time of writing and are subject to change
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Friday, September 24, 2010

Chelsea and Manchester City united by oil and ambition

When Manchester City face Chelsea in the big Saturday lunchtime kick-off, a club sold by a former prime minister of Thailand to Abu Dhabi royalty will confront another owned by a Russian oligarch who is a friend and ally to Vladimir Putin.

We take all this for granted now, but astonishment still strikes when the bonfire smoke from a combined £1.2bn spend rises from these games. Here we see a clash of plutocrats whose wealth derives, surprisingly, from the old‑fashioned stuff.

Oil, aluminium, gas. We know the who, the when and the how but there is still some mystery about the why, especially in City's case. Has HH Sheikh Mansour bin Zayed bin Sultan Al Nahyan really spent £650m to watch one game – last month's 3-0 home win over Liverpool?

That blessed phrase "a football man" jumps out. How do you become one? Is there a City and Guilds or a university in the Philippines that will send you a certificate for £9.99, plus postage, or is there a minimum five‑year apprenticeship at Tuesday night Carling Cup games? Abramovich and Sheikh Mansour took the fast-track to membership, buying love in the way another United Arab Emirates family, the Maktoums, virtually annexed Flat racing until Ireland's Coolmore mafia fought back.

The Premier League's upper reaches present a fascinating split. In this age of the leveraged buyout – of the toxic-debt threat and the ball-busting interest charge – City and Chelsea are monuments to generosity. It would be wiser not to call it philanthropy because both have strategic motives. But you can bet your car that Liverpool and Manchester United fans would prefer the model bequeathed by a Sheikh who sits on top of 9% of the world's oil reserves and by Chelsea's yacht-collecting sugar-papa. Liverpool, knocked out of the Carling Cup by Northampton Town and still paralysed by boardroom chaos, offer a particularly dismal counterpoint to the £120m lavished by Sheikh Mansour this summer on new players.

Abramovich set out at Chelsea in June 2003 in a stronger place because the team he bought were already on the edge of title challenges. His first really smart hire was a noncombatant: José Mourinho, who pushed Chelsea across the Rubicon of a first league title for 50 years. In his first season Abramovich lost £140m and there has been much bungling along the way. Interfering in Mourinho's work was the cardinal error that led to a long spell of managerial instability which ended only when Carlo Ancelotti showed himself to be a master at handling the unofficial Chelsea cabinet headed by John Terry.

For his £600m Abramovich has boughthimself three league titles, a trio of FA Cups and two Carling pots, plus a Champions League final. Not bad, in football's warped economics. City's owner, whose fortune was said during the takeover to be "many, many billions of dollars", has reached the Europa League so far. His is more of a bottom-up transformation, motivated, we assume, by the knowledge that Abu Dhabi's oil will run out in 90 years.

In the governing families of the United Arab Emirates, Sheikh Mansour is among those pushing for modernisation and diversification: hence the purchase, after 13 hours of talks with Thaksin Shinawatra in the seven-star Emirates Palace, of an institution who could not dispute the title of second biggest club in Manchester.

So what can Sheikh Mansour learn from Abramovich?

Chiefly, that without the right manager you're whistling Dixie. Only a handful of European coaches can manipulate a squad of 25 multimillionaires while coping with the prickly heat of expectation. Mourinho could, so could Guus Hiddink. Ancelotti brought realpolitik. The City job, though, has come too soon to another Italian, Roberto Mancini, a student impersonating a professor.

Sheikh Mansour's net spend on players is £300m and the annual wage bill will obliterate the £100m barrier in the next accounts. Against that background the owner must wince to see City take to the pitch with three defensive midfielders, or to hear the constant grumbling about the manager's training ground routines.

For Mancini to be shoved aside would not shock. The issue is whether the Sheikh's men were wise to appoint a young coach who made his breakthrough at a conservative club (Internazionale) in a more defensive league (Serie A) and expect him to adapt to the pinball tempo of the English game at a club where holding midfielders (Yaya Touré) can earn nearly £200,000 a week if all the clauses and incentives in their contracts are activated.

Abramovich and his Middle Eastern rival owe a debt, you could say, to Hicks, Gillett and the Glazers. Thanks to The Borrowers, few pause these days to consider the obscenity of the personal wealth behind City or Chelsea. Nah, forget that, the game's about to start.
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Thursday, September 23, 2010

Manchester United boss Sir Alex Ferguson scouts Atletico Madrid keeper David De Gea

Manchester United boss Sir Alex Ferguson flew in person to check up on Atletico Madrid goalkeeper David De Gea last night, according to a report from The Daily Mirror.

The Scot missed United's League Cup win at Scunthorpe to ostensibly go and watch Valencia, the Red Devils' next Champions League opponents. But that was apparently a cover story to also allow him to check out De Gea, according to The Mirror.

United have been watching the 19-year-old for some time now as they look for a successor to Edwin van der Sar.

It is reported that Feguson believes that Atletico could be ready to sell the promising shot-stopper, after missing out on deals for Diego Forlan and Sergio Aguero in the summer. United are apparently keen to move quickly in order to foil other pontential suitors, with a £12 million fee seen as enough to tempt the Spaniards to part with the youngster, who won the Europa League with los Colchoneros last term.

The United board are also believed to be ready to sancton the move as the player's value would only increase whilst he was with the club.
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Wednesday, September 22, 2010

Come and get me! Manchester United put on red alert after Wesley Sneijder talks over new Inter Milan deal collapses


Wesley Sneijder has put Manchester United on red-alert after talks over a new Inter Milan deal collapsed. The Holland international - who played a lead role in helping the Oranje to the World Cup final - was a summer target for Old Trafford boss Sir Alex Ferguson. But the midfielder seemingly ended any hope United had of luring Sneijder to England after publicly pledging his future to Inter.

Talks over a new deal with the European champions had begun, but those negotiations have since come to a standstill. Soren Lorby, Sneijder's agent said: 'The talks have broken off and will resume when Inter open the door again to continue, 'Wesley has become very popular throughout Europe after the World Cup, but he has an obligation to Inter and was flattered by the words of [Inter president] Massimo Morratti, who claimed he was the leader for years to come. 'Wesley had the prospect of a great salary but Inter have gone back on their previous words.

If Sneijder is made available, United will be forced to battle it out with Real Madrid. Bernabeu boss Jose Mourinho built a special bond with Sneijder during his trophy-laden spell at the San Siro. And Lorby added: 'The attitude of the club gives him an uneasy feeling and that is reinforced by the interest of Real Madrid. 'Everyone knows that Jose Mourinho and Wesley have a very special relationship. Madrid is a more serious option now after Wesley winning three awards and reaching the World Cup final with the Oranje.'
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Sunday, September 19, 2010

United away is daunting but Konchesky's having a ball

Paul Konchesky played for four London clubs in all manner of derby games; now, as they used to say in Monty Python, for something completely different. Manchester United against Liverpool is not Fulham versus Charlton.

Any new foreign recruits at Anfield preparing for this fixture for the first time, such as Christian Poulsen or Milan Jovanovic, may need a sharp lesson from Jamie Carragher or Steven Gerrard about the importance of it. But like Joe Cole, another Londoner who had spent all his working life in the capital before this season, Konchesky is immersed deeply enough in English football culture to understand the importance of what happens at Old Trafford from 1.30pm today.

"When you watch Man United play Liverpool you can see how big it is and I'm looking forward to being part of it," he said. "I think the derbies up north are bigger than the ones in London." Konchesky was speaking after the comfortable 4-1 victory over Steaua Bucharest in the Europa League on Thursday night, having just made his home debut following a transfer from Fulham only completed on deadline day in the transfer window.

A first taste, then, of walking up the tunnel to strains of "You'll Never Walk Alone" and receiving the Kop's applause; yet the very fact that this was the Europa League on Channel Five (as United supporters will doubtless remind the visitors today) and a game being played in front of Anfield's lowest crowd for eight years, barely 25,000, emphasised the current gap between two of the great modern dynasties of the domestic game.

It is well known that when Sir Alex Ferguson arrived in Manchester from Aberdeen in 1986, his ambition was to knock Liverpool off their (expletive deleted) perch. Younger readers may need reminding of how far below that perch United were at the time and how much messy stuff from Merseyside was landing on their head. Liverpool had just won their eighth title in 11 seasons, and hoovered up four European Cups in the same period; United had not held up the First Division trophy for almost 20 years. In Ferguson's first match they lost 2-0 to Oxford and sank to 20th in the table, on the same day Liverpool assumed what was taken to be their rightful position at the head of it.

Removal from the perch took at least five years, the 1991-92 season being the first since 1968 in which United finished above the other Reds. Even then, Liverpool had the last word, denying United any chance of pipping Leeds to the championship by beating them at Anfield in the penultimate game. In the Premier League era, however, as our table (left) shows, the clubs' relative status could hardly be more clear-cut. Only once in all that time have Liverpool, seeking a first title since 1990, managed to finish higher (2001-02) and on average United's superiority has been in the region of 15 points.

Of course, there have been individual games in which Liverpudlian pride has been restored, notably in the season before last when a double success included a 4-1 victory at Old Trafford and the unlikely spectacle of Fernando Torres bullying Nemanja Vidic. The manager, a chap called Rafa Benitez, was immediately handed an improved five-year contract until 2014.

That proved an expensive piece of paper and, following the Spaniard's sacking, it is Roy Hodgson who will be in the opposite dug-out to Ferguson today. Fellow Londoners Cole and Konchesky were two of the signings he was keenest to make and they are expected to be among the few outfield players who will be retained from Thursday's much-changed side for this afternoon's encounter.

Konchesky has the advantage of having played against United already this season in a Fulham side that benefited from a late penalty save and an even later equaliser to hold them 2-2 at Craven Cottage. "They [Liverpool players] know what Man United are about," he said. "They have not really hit form yet and hopefully we won't let them hit form against us. If we start well at Old Trafford and get their fans on their back then hopefully we can go on to win the game."

Although claiming a record against United that is "not too bad, to be fair", he is aware of greater expectation at his new club. "No disrespect to Fulham but if you went to Old Trafford and came away with a draw then that's a massive bonus but going with Liverpool you expect to get a win. That's the expectation of the club and the fans. That's what comes with it."

What will not change is Konchesky's vigorously physical approach. "You know what derbies are like," he said. "I just have to go and play my game and whatever happens, happens. Hopefully the ref understands that. I play every game the same and I want to go out and win. It's a big derby and tackles will be flying about so we need a sensible ref." After Spain against Holland, Howard Webb should be well prepared.
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Thursday, September 16, 2010

Manchester United midfielder Antonio Valencia's ankle operation a 'success'

Manchester United have confirmed that the surgery on winger Antonio Valencia's injured ankle has gone well. The Ecuador international dislocated and broke his ankle during the Champions League draw with Rangers at Old Trafford on Tuesday night. The winger is facing a lay-off that could potentially last all season, though United maintain that he is in good spirits and hopeful he may yet return before the end of the current campaign.

"A plate has been inserted to stabilise the fracture but there is obvious significant ligament damage that follows a dislocation and he will be out for a good portion of the season," a statement on United's official website reads. "Contrary to recent reports there has been no official contact from the Ecuadorian national team. "Antonio is perfectly fine, very positive and very determined."
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Wednesday, September 15, 2010

Champions League match ratings: Manchester United v Rangers

Tomasz Kuszczak 6 Allowed Edwin van der Sar a night's rest. Will seldom have an easier evening, with Rangers not managing a single noteworthy attempt

Wes Brown 6First start of the season and the right-back found Rangers to be obliging opponents, rarely testing the theory that he might be rusty.

Rio Ferdinand 6

First game back from a knee injury passed without him being overly extended. Slipped back into the team seamlessly

Chris Smalling 6

Lack of ambition from opponents made it a comfortable evening for the £10.75m recruit from Fulham last season

Fábio da Silva 6

An able deputy for Patrice Evra but he did not drive forward enough for someone who is known for his overlapping runs

Antonio Valencia 6

Valencia had not had one of his better games but it is difficult to overstate the importance of the setback his injury represents

Darren Fletcher 6

The only man to keep his place from Saturday's draw against Everton. A tireless shift but for all his qualities he does not offer great creativity

Darron Gibson 7

A competent display from the midfielder, including another demonstration of his ability to shoot from long distance

Park Ji-sung 6

Struggles to have the same impact as for his national team and for all the hard running he was unable to make a telling impact

Wayne Rooney 5

Things are just not clicking. His head will never drop and he did not play badly here – but his touch is not there at the moment

Javier Hernández 6

After his impressive form in pre-season the Mexican has flickered and he can look a little anxious at times

Substitutes

Ryan Giggs for Valencia 63mins

Michael Owen for Park 75mins

Jonny Evans for Fábio da Silva 75mins

Rangers

Allan McGregor 7

Would have expected a more pressing night and may feel that it was unnecessary to get booked for time-wasting

Kirk Broadfoot 7

Quick to the ball, strong in the tackle and one of the few Rangers defenders who had the licence to roam into attacking positions

David Weir 7

His curse as a 40-year-old is that it is difficult to mention him without bringing in his age but his longevity can only be admired

Madjid Bougherra 6

A number of telling interceptions and clearing headers but he was helped by the fact that United's strikers were so vapid

Sasa Papac 6

Like all of the Rangers back line, he can reflect on a decent night's work which thoroughly subdued United's attackers

Steven Whittaker 6

Deployed on the right side of defence, he acquitted himself well against Park Ji-sung and, after Valencia's injury, Ryan Giggs

Lee McCulloch 7

Job was to patrol the area between defence and midfield, and it was his presence that helped to negate United's forward thrusts

Maurice Edu 6

A neat and competent display in the centre of midfield, even if there were occasions when he was guilty of wasting possession

Steven Davis 7

One of the more assured Rangers players on the ball. A controlled and disciplined evening, showing a neat appreciation of space

Steven Naismith 7

Rangers attacks were so sporadic that we hardly saw him in an attacking sense but he stood out for his hard running and positional play

Kenny Miller 6

A difficult evening for the one striker in the team, frequently isolated and going long spells without being prominently involved
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Tuesday, September 14, 2010

Manchester United v Rangers: Gary Neville admits injuries has cost him the captaincy


Neville will become only the fifth player to break the 600 barrier for United, following Ryan Giggs, Sir Bobby Charlton, Bill Foulkes and Paul Scholes, if he faces Rangers in the Champions League Group C opener.

But having been struck by a series of injuries in recent seasons, Neville has found himself reduced to a squad player rather than the automatic first choice of his younger days. And with Nemanja Vidic having worn the captain's armband since the start of the season, Neville admitted he was not surprised to see the Serbian defender retain the captaincy when the pair lined up together at Everton last Saturday.

Neville said: "It is something myself and the manager spoke about last season when it was obvious I wasn't going to play most matches.

"I was captain one week, then it was Ryan Giggs, then it was Rio Ferdinand and Edwin van der Sar. That is not ideal.

"You need someone leading the team out every week. It makes sense for that to happen because, as the manager said, I am not going to play every week.

"The captaincy is a great honour, but it has never been the major priority for me. I played here for most of my career not as captain, so to not be captain now is not unusual."

Ferdinand's anticipated return from a three-month knee injury lay-off on Tuesday night could prompt Ferguson to choose between the England captain and Vidic for the honour of leading United out.

But with Ferguson insisting that his new captain must be someone who will play regularly, Ferdinand's patchy fitness record could count against him.

Ferguson said: "Gary is still club captain, but the situation is that I have been looking for someone who is going to be playing consistently every week.

"Over the last two or three years, and Gary agrees with me, we have had to pass the baton along the line a few times.

"We have not had a consistent captain. Gary's injuries have prevented him playing all the time. If he was available all the time he would be the captain.

"He would have been captain against Everton on Saturday, but I have to look at the overall picture and, with all due respect to Gary's time at United, he knows and I know, we don't play him every week.

"I am looking for someone who is going to play every week as part of the criteria to be captain at our club."

Ferguson, meanwhile, believes Rangers' supporters will behave at Old Trafford on Tuesday night on their first visit to Manchester since violence followed their 2008 Uefa Cup final defeat against Zenit St Petersburg at Eastlands.

He said: "It pained me that some of the visiting supporters of the Scottish side ran amok in the city centre. But I have every confidence that we can stage a trouble-free game. We have worked hard on the security aspect."
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Friday, September 10, 2010

Manchester United could drop Wayne Rooney for weekend clash with Everton - report

Manchester United manager Sir Alex Ferguson is set to wait until the last minute before deciding whether or not to play Wayne Rooney against Everton this weekend, according to The Sun. The report claims that Ferguson is concerned about the effect that walking out to a passionate and tribal Goodison Park could have on the striker's notoriously volatile temperament.

Although he featured for England in Switzerland and performed well this week, playing at his former club in the wake of recent revelations concerning his private life could prove to be a step too far.

With the traditionally toxic rivalry between the cities of Liverpool and Manchester already forming a backdrop to the game, Rooney's involvement as a former Toffee who grew up supporting the club along with his recent off-field issues could provide the fuel for an explosion from Rooney.

Ferguson has accepted the striker is already having to deal with a lot currently, but will apparently wait a while in order to properly assess the situation.
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Thursday, September 9, 2010

Phil Jagielka warns Manchester United's Wayne Rooney: Expect fierce reaction from Everton fans

Everton defender Phil Jagielka believes Manchester United striker Wayne Rooney would be wise to expect something of an unwelcoming reaction from the Toffees fans at Goodison Park this weekend.

Tabloid revelations about Rooney's private life will be sure to add an extra layer of spite to the Everton fans' treatment of their former favourite, who has endured an intimidating reception on all his previous returns to his old stomping ground.

"There's a good chance," Jagielka said, according to The Sun, when asked about whether the crowd will look to rile the 24-year-old. "He normally gets quite a bit of stick anyway. I can't see that changing.

Jageilka does expect Rooney to be able to handle it though, with the former Toffee sure to be keen to show his former fans just how good he is. "I am sure Wayne can deal with it," the defender added. "He is a tough lad and he will let his football do the talking."
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Wednesday, September 8, 2010

Manchester United winger Ryan Giggs open to replacing John Toshack as Wales boss


Manchester United stalwart Ryan Giggs has insisted that he would like to manage Wales someday. The 36-year-old is currently being touted as the first-choice replacement, should incumbent manager John Toshack decide to part ways with the national team as widely expected. It is thought that the loss to Montenegro on Friday has made the former Real Madrid boss reconsider his options, with several reports pointing towards an exit.

Meanwhile, Giggs is on the evening of a long and fruitful career as a professional football player, but has in recent times been integral to his club's successes. And it appears that the Welshman is not keen on calling time on his club career, having already retired from international football in 2007. However, the situation of former Welsh boss Mark Hughes, who was still playing at the highest level when initially appointed at the country's helm in 1999, has cautioned Giggs against ruling anything out.

"If you go into management, the big job is to be in charge of your country. And I'm no different in terms of thinking like that," Giggs said in the Daily Telegraph. "At the moment it is difficult, because I still have commitments as a player. "But I always use the 'Sparky' [Mark Hughes] situation.

"One minute he is playing for Wales and in the Premier League with Blackburn, then the next thing you know, he is managing his country. 'Sparky' never really planned for that."
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Monday, September 6, 2010

Manchester United striker Wayne Rooney cheated with prostitute during wife's pregnancy

Another top British soccer star has been booted into the center of an alleged sex scandal. According to both The News of the World and the Sunday Mirror, a 21-year-old prostitute is claiming she bedded Manchester United striker Wayne Rooney seven times in a four month span, all while his wife was pregnant.

"Wayne chased me with sex texts and paid in wads of cash. He didn't seem to care he was betraying Coleen," Jennifer Thompson, who charges clients $1800 a night, told the News of the World. London's Daily Mail reported that Rooney's wife, Coleen, had fled to her parents' home to mull the future of their marriage in the wake of the tabloid headlines.

It's just the latest sex scandal to rock British soccer in recent months. Peter Crouch, Rooney's fellow striker on the national team, withdrew from Euro qualifiers last month after being accused of cheating on his model fiancee with a teenage prostitute. And their England teammate, John Terry, who is still married for now, lost his captaincy earlier in the year after knocking up another teammate's ex-girlfriend.

England midfielder James Milner leaped to his beleaguered teammates' defense - sort of - as Rooney planned to join his England teammates in Switzerland Monday for a Euro 2012 qualifier in spite of the swirling scandal.

"Things are always said in the newspapers. It is part and parcel of football and down to us to make sure the only thing that matters is what happens on the pitch," Milner told reporters Sunday.
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Thursday, September 2, 2010

Rio Ferdinand eyes Manchester United comeback after reserve outing

The England captain showed no ill-effects from his injury during a 45-minute Manchester Senior Cup exertion against Oldham Athletic’s youthful second string at Stalybridge Celtic’s Bower Fold ground.

And with the trip to Everton beginning a crucial week of fixtures for United, who face Rangers in the Champions League on Sept 14 before entertaining Liverpool at Old Trafford five days later, Ferdinand is now likely to challenge for a swift return to first-team action after proving his fitness. The 31 year-old has been sidelined since suffering knee ligament damage while training with England in Rustenburg on June 4, a week before the start of the World Cup in South Africa earlier this summer.

An apparently innocuous challenge on Emile Heskey resulted in the £30million defender being ruled out of the tournament, but his return to fitness with United has taken longer than initially anticipated.

Early hopes that Ferdinand would be fit for the start of the season were quickly ruled out and manager Sir Alex Ferguson revealed during United’s summer tour of North America that a setback had left the former West Ham and Leeds centre-half facing a September comeback.

A further gloomy bulletin from Ferguson two weeks ago suggested that Ferdinand’s return would be further delayed until the end this month, but the player stepped up training last week and he was able to participate with the first-team squad prior to the international break.

Ferdinand was by no means given an easy ride by the home side, with teenaged forward Andrew Crompton clearly relishing the opportunity to test himself against his illustrious opponent.

And while Crompton’s pace and tenacity was not enough to worry Ferdinand, the United defender was given little room for complacency by the youngster.

"Rio is always the same player," said United reserve team manager Ole Gunnar Solskjaer. "It is a while since he has played but he was still calm. He has get through an important 45 minutes, straight after two very hard training sessions yesterday and the day before so we are delighted with him.

"It was always planned that he would play 45 minutes. I am not sure he needs any more games. Rio is a naturally fit lad Today was about distances and getting tighter to the ball. Now he is available for selection again."

With United midfielder Paul Scholes watching from the stands, fellow first-team squad members Wes Brown and Anderson were also in action as they continued their own comebacks from injury lay-offs.

Anderson managed 60 minutes for the reserves against Manchester City last week in his first outing following a cruciate ligament injury while Brown, who was sidelined for two months with a broken foot sustained in March, once again appeared for the second string, despite proving his fitness on the club’s pre-season tour.

Portuguese forward Bebe, whose absence from last week’s reserve game prompted a staunch defence of the £7.4million signing by Ferguson, was not selected for this game after being called into the Portugal U-21 squad for Friday’s clash against England in Barcelos.

Meanwhile, Manchester United chief executive David Gill has admitted that the club has fallen short of matching last season’s figures for the sale of season tickets.

But, despite a proposed fans’ boycott of season tickets as a protest against the club’s owners, the Glazer family, Gill insists sales of 51,800 are a positive figure.

Gill said: “Last year our target was 54,000 season tickets, we’ve sold 51,800 (this year), which is pretty good in the current climate. “We’ve sold more season tickets than the capacity of most Premier League grounds. Our executive seat sales are on track as compared with last year in a different market. The ticket sales have held up.”
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Wednesday, September 1, 2010

Manchester United & Rangers Plan Joint Security Operation For Champions League Clashes

Manchester United and Rangers are implementing unprecedented joint security measures in order to prevent crowd trouble when the clubs meet in this season's Champions League. Club chiefs are keen to avoid a repeat of the scenes during and after the 2008 UEFA Cup final, held at the City of Manchester Stadium, when thousands of Rangers fans descended on the city.

There were major outbreaks of trouble during that evening, with police officers attacked and extensive damage to property around the city centre. Rangers fans travelling to the Old Trafford tie will have to travel on official coaches or not be allowed to attend the match at all, according to the report. Their coaches will also be directed to Wigan Atheltic's DW Stadium, some 17 miles or so from Old Trafford, where their match tickets will be distributed, in order to decrease the risk of trouble in Manchester.
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