Friday, 20 September 2013

David De gea: Wayne Rooney and RVP combination is very perfect

David Moyes’ two main strikers have scored five goals in the last two games between them as United have beat Crystal Palace 2-0 and Bayern Leverkusen 4-2
And Rooney, who has three of them, took his tally to 200 goals for United with a brace against the German side on Tuesday.
Goalkeeper De Gea was impressed with his performance, telling United official website: "Not only did he score goals, he played some great football, worked hard, brought dynamism to the team and played a really great game.
"It’s good for us that he and Robin score goals. It is important; they are key players and this year they will combine to great effect."
Midfielder Michael Carrick felt Rooney was unstoppable against Leverkusen and believes he has returned to his best. He added: "It was probably Wayne's best performance that I've seen for a while. It's great to have him in that form -- he can be untouchable when he’s like that.
"To have Wayne and Robin scoring and assisting is fantastic. Even if they're maybe not having the best of games they can always come up with something. I thought they played really well on Tuesday."
United face Manchester City next in the derby at the weekend and De Gea added: "The victory has boosted our confidence for Sunday."



Tottenham Hotspurs cruise past tromso in the UEFA Cup

This was the second of two cup games that all season ticket holders receive for 'free'. The empty seats of said season ticket holders that normally surround me, gave it's own verdict on the value of this game. 

People would rather view this tosh in the privacy of their own homes, where they can feel free to read a book or switch over for five minutes, rather than to be forced to stand and watch this nonsense as if it were a sombre church service. 

What to learn from the game? 

Jermain Defoe is adept at scoring against weak opposition. The very impressive Danny Rose can get injured in games that don't matter. Christian Eriksen is too good for the likes of Tromso. 

Nothing that we didn't know before. Tromso qualified for this competition though the lottery of the Fair Play League. They are currently third from bottom in the Norwegian League. This is a team that are worse than Paolo Di Canio’s Sunderland. 

Nor are there more difficult games to come. FC Sheriff's proudest achievement is to boast a sheriff's badge as the official club emblem. Anzhi were a good team a year ago, but have since sold all their best players - coming perilously near to flogging Spurs a certain Willian. 

For the next few weeks these games will serve an nothing but a nuisance. The best hope is that Spurs win their first four and can then field a team of teenagers that aren’t required for any serious action. 

It wasn’t always like this. The UEFA Cup used to be renowned as being more difficult to win than the European Cup. After all, it used to contain the teams from every country that finished second, third and fourth. It was the Champions League without the champions and the bit where they played in a league. 

It was decided that the competition should be more like the Champions League in order to live up that experience. It has only succeeded in making a once proud competition an utter irrelevance. 

The obvious truth is that the best way for UEFA’s secondary competition to prosper is to make it a knockout competition, with a Champions League spot waiting for the winner of that pot of gold. 

Instead, we have to wait until 2014 before things actually get serious and interesting. This is the price for finishing that point behind Arsenal last season. 

The one way that the Europa League can aid the pursuit of finishing above Arsenal is by giving experience and fitness to the players that need it. 

Younes Kaboul and Sandro got 90 minutes under their belt, while Erik Lamela will be better off for having made his quiet debut. Lewis Holtby was given a start and managed to enthrall and frustrate in equal measures. 

There's not much more to say when a team of Tottenham's quality meets a side that would struggle in England's lowest professional leagues. Spurs won, as you'd expect, and the biggest concern is not where the team is in the group, but as to who might be injured for the real action at the weekend. 

Surely that tells it's own story.

Wenger:Arsenal team spirit is very high

Already, this has been a season of contradictions in the Premier League, where the games seem to be punctuated by the noise of one collapsing myth after another.

Jose Mourinho will re-energise Chelsea! Not yet, he hasn't. Stoke City are hoofball merchants! Ah ... not anymore, they're not. And now, the final indignity: Arsenal are mentally frail and need 20 chances to score! What's that? Oh.

It could hardly be said that Arsenal offered a vintage performance away at Marseille on Wednesday night. Their passing was off, their movement was awry, Mesut Ozil and Jack Wilshere seemed to be in each other's way, and had lolloping man mountain Gignac been able to tie Marseille's impressive buildup play together, they might have been down by two goals at halftime. 
Instead, this decidedly un-Arsenal-like performance ended with a decidedly un-Arsenal-like result. They won. On every occasion that someone messed up at the back, someone else was there to repair the damage. Far from requiring repeated runs at Steve Madanda before even threatening a goal, Theo Walcott and Aaron Ramsey  ruthlessly took their chances when they came. Then at the end, when Ayew’s penalty suggested something extraordinary might happen, Arsenal barely even blinked in surprise before calmly holding out for the three points.

All across the team, young players whose potential had been called into question are rising up to prove their critics wrong.Kieran  Gibbs has been in exceptional form of late. Wilshere is as yet somehow uninjured. Aaron Ramsey is scoring so freely that if that myth about the link between his goals and the deaths of celebrities was true, the gossip magazines would be gossip pamphlets.

Speaking as someone who loves Arsene Wenger but has reluctantly written him off on record at least three times now, there's something noble about this sudden turnaround. There is little evidence on paper to suggest that Arsenal have what it takes to finally end that trophy drought, even with Ozil, but there they are on grass stringing six consecutive wins together in all competitions.

Ozil is, of course, a wonderful signing. Not only is he one of Europe's best footballers, which really should be one of the first things you look for in a player at this level, but his arrival signifies a new mentality at the club. For the first time in years, season-ticket holders are looking at the huge gap in their bank accounts and are content with the knowledge that the money has gone to something other than Arsenal's debt repayments. There is a sense that the boardroom and the supporters' associations actually have the same objectives in mind for once.

But there is still so much to do. For another £20 million, not a huge sum given the improved terms of those TV deals, the rest of the squad could have been boosted as well. Enough deadwood was cleared from the wage bill to free up room for a spare defender, another defensive midfielder who can tackle and, of course, a striker.

Careering into a long season with only one senior centre-forward seems a little unwise, rather like taking a toddler to the shops without a spare diaper; you might get away with it, but the chances are that this story is going to have a messy ending. Olivier Giroud is not immortal, and all evidence suggests that he can be brought down quite easily, even with conventional weapons.

At the other end of the pitch, Wojciech Szczesny shows no sign of shrugging off the strange funk that enveloped him over a year ago. Once one of the most promising goalkeepers in the Premier League, now he seems in such a rush to prove that he is a decisive man of action that he recklessly charges off his line, spreading panic. His generally excellent handling makes up for that, but you always wonder how far he is away from an accident.

Yet for all of that, this is the first time since 2008 that it's been possible to look at Arsenal as they pirouette around the park and imagine them to be contenders for silverware. For all the arguments over money, they now have something you can't buy: spirit.

With spirit, almost anything is possible. Spirit can take you through those grim winter months when the games come at you thick and fast, like carlos tevez’s parking tickets. Spirit can make doubted players rise up and fulfill their potential. Spirit can help a team renowned for late collapses and individual errors shrug off its fears and stick two fingers up at the critics.

We're already reassessing so much in the Premier League. Perhaps it's time we reassessed Arsenal.


Thursday, 19 September 2013

Manuel Neuer ready for schalke's return

Bayern Munich goalkeeper Manuel Neuer is looking forward to returning to Schalke on Saturday and has tipped his former club to be among the Bundesliga title challengers this season.
Neuer, 27, played 156 Bundesliga games for Schalke and spent a total of 20 years at his hometown club from youth level until he joined Bayern in 2011.
The Germany international became his country’s most expensive keeper of all-time when the Bavarians splashed out €27.5 million including add-ons to prise him from the Royal Blues.
It took Neuer another year to win the Bundesliga title, having been denied with Schalke on the final day of the 2006-2007 season.
He has yet to be on the losing side against his former club since his departure and is relishing the prospect of lining up against Schalke again.
“I am in my third season at Bayern now, but still know my way around Schalke,” Neuer told kicker. “I was born in Buer [a Gelsenkirchen suburb] and played for Schalke for 20 years. Of course, that is a homecoming."
While not ruling out returning to Schalke after hanging up his boots, Neuer said that he could imagine staying at Bayern for the rest of his career. “But you never know what the future has lined up for you,” he added. “Football is fast moving and a business.”
That fast-moving business is responsible for one of the most surprising transfers of the summer -- Kevin-Prince Boateng’s return to the Bundesliga. The former AC Milan star was on target as schalke 3-0 defeat over steaua bucuresti on Wednesday night.
“Schalke also play in the Champions League, that’s why it won’t be easy to beat them away,” Neuer said. “It worked out in the past two years. [But] now Schalke reinforced their squad again, and immediately they are on a roll. Schalke are dangerous in attack, especially after the Kevin-Prince Boateng transfer.”
Neuer explained that at first he was surprised to hear about the Boateng signing and then went on to praise the Berlin-born Ghana international.
“I played with Kevin-Prince in the Germany Under-21s [before Boateng switched allegiances ahead of the 2010 World Cup]. He is a very good player,” Neuer said. “He had a good start at Schalke. He is dangerous.”
Neuer added that he was “100% certain” that Boateng has made Schalke stronger. Bayern, currently second in Bundesliga and trailing league leaders Borussia Dortmund by two points, take on Schalke, who have not conceded a goal in three successive games, on Saturday evening.


Wayne Rooney enjoys reunion with Moyes

Wayne Rooney has praised the manager who denied him a move to Chelsea, saying David Moyes’ training sessions have helped him return to his best and that he was the right choice to take over at Old Trafford.
The England striker’s relationship with Sir Alex Ferguson broke down at the end of last season when the former Manchester United manager left him out of the side and said he had submitted a transfer request.
And when Chelsea made offers for the 27-year-old in the summer, United rejected them and Moyes was adamant he would not let the unsettled forward leave.  
Rooney played for Moyes at boyhood club Everton before joining United in 2004 and reached 200 goals for the club with a brace in Tuesday’s 4-2 Champions League win against Bayer Leverkusen.
And he hailed Moyes for his role in it, telling British national newspapers: “It’s obviously good to be working with him again. He’s a great manager and thoroughly deserves this job. Because of what he did at Everton.”
“The training is a bit different under the new manager. I remember it from Everton, it’s more intense. That’s helping me. I feel good and am glad to be out playing.”
Whereas Ferguson played Rooney in midfield at times or left him on the bench, Moyes has vowed to pick him in attack and made it clear he sees him as a first-choice player, even encouraging wayne rooney to better his previous performance.
And in the last two games his first-choice strike duo of Rooney and Robin van Persie have contributed five goals, with the Merseysider getting three of them.
Rooney was quick to deny reports of a rift between them and believes they have proved they can gel on and off the pitch.
“I have seen things said over the summer but me and Robin are friends off the pitch," he added. "There is no problem between me and Robin at all. We are great friends and we want to help each other and be successful.
“I think the manager has made it clear that he wants one up and one behind and whatever way round that is it doesn’t matter to me.
"It doesn’t matter as long as one is always filling in behind and helping out the midfield. We have done the work together and the times we played together last season we did well so hopefully we can play more together this season and do well. We dovetail well and try and help each other score goals.”
Rooney is just the fourth player to register a double-century of goals for Manchester United and is now only 49 behind the club’s record scorer, Sir Bobby Charlton.
“It’s a massive football club and it’s amazing how long that record has stood for," he said. "So it’s great to get to 200. That’s a great honour and I’m really proud of that.
“To be edging closer to Bobby Charlton’s record is great for me.”


Monaco denies Falcao clause

Monaco vice-president Vadim Vasilyev insists that Radamel Falcao does not have a clause in his contract that would allow him to leave at the end of the season.
Falcao, 27, headed the list of signings this summer as Monaco spent €166 million on new players.
But last month the former Atletico Madrid forward was forced to deny a speculation that he was eyeing up a return to spain.
Ahead of a trip to title rivals Paris Saint-Germain on Sunday, Vasilyev again said that there was no truth to talk of the Colombian leaving for Real Madrid.
"There’s no clause in his contract that might allow him to leave after a year," Vasilyev told L’Equipe.
"It wouldn’t make any sense to build a project around a player who could leave us after one season.
"There are always people who have an interest in these rumours… I would just remind you that negotiations between Tottenham and Real Madrid [for the transfer of Gareth Bale] were very difficult."
Monaco were promoted as Ligue 2 champions last season and the Russian-owned club spent heavily to bring in players like Falcao, Joao Moutinho, James Rodriguez and Geoffrey Kondogbia.
"I know him well," Vasilyev told L’Equipe. "He dedicated a jersey to me when I was sick in the spring. But we didn’t discuss a transfer because Cristiano is a Real Madrid player.
"At the time, he was negotiating a new contract and we were after Falcao. We can’t buy Falcao and Cristiano -- you have to remain humble.
"I would like to have Cristiano but we’ve spent a lot of money and we’ll invest less in the future. We can’t continue at that pace and we want to bring through some young players from our training centre, which is one of the best in France."
Vasilyev also denied reports that the club had approached Roberto Mancini, Jose Mourinho or Guus Hiddink this summer with a view to replacing current manager Claudio Ranieri.  
Ranieri, 61, led Monaco to the Ligue 2 title last season but there was speculation that the principality club would seek to bring in a big-name coach for the new season.
The Italian is still in charge, however, and Monaco now lead Ligue 1 with four wins and a draw from their opening five matches.
Vasilyev said that Ranieri’s position was never in doubt, despite rumours that they had made contact with other managers.
"It was the press that said that and it was negative for the team, for Claudio, for us," he said.
"I said in May that Ranieri would remain as our manager and I’ve always confirmed it. I never had any contact with Mancini or anyone else. Of course there were managers who contacted us.
"It was the same thing for [Wayne] Rooney and [Carlos] Tevez, who we never contacted. There are always people, around players or managers, who are going to spread the idea that Monaco would be interested -- that can help in a period of negotiations."


Five ways to rescue the Europa league from its lustre loss

You've probably noticed the posters. You'll almost certainly have heard the adverts on the radio, or seen the trails on the television. Wherever you go, the glamour of it is inescapable. Managers and players await in breathless excitement; this is the moment they have dreamed about. This is the competition they savour. That's right.

This week, the Europa League is back.

Of course, there haven't really been any posters or adverts or trails. As ever, Europe's secondary competition will start on Thursday with little or no fanfare. All of that is reserved for the Champions League, which is greeted like Santa Claus at Christmas; the Europa League is treated more like an unloved, tight-fisted uncle. It's coming round, whether you like it or not, and it probably won’t be bringing a present.

This is a tremendous shame. Younger readers may find it difficult to believe, but there was a time when the UEFA Cup -- which is what the Europa League used to, and should still, be called -- was probably the most interesting of the three European competitions.

That's right; there used to be three. It worked perfectly. On alternate Tuesday nights, the UEFA Cup graced our screens. Wednesday was European Cup night, and on Thursdays came the long since departed Cup Winners' Cup.

All three had their unique charms. The European Cup was the main event, the champions against the champions, the elite. The Cup Winners' Cup was a carnival of the unknown. Because of the inherently arbitrary nature of domestic cup competitions, there would always be a Vicenza, or a Stuttgart, or a Mallorca. They had players you'd never heard of, shirts you'd never seen. They had a mystique.

The UEFA Cup, often, was the best. It was sprawling, yes, but that was its appeal: it included three, four or five sides from each of the major nations, and invariably one or two of them would go on to win their domestic championship that year. The UEFA Cup was a glimpse into the future. These were (sometimes, not always) the sides with the bright young stars, the innovative managers, the clubs on the way up, not on the inevitable path down.

All of that has gone now. The primacy of the Champions League has made the Europa League a distinct second-class competition. It has robbed Europe of its mystique. It is the same clubs, in the same combinations, playing the same ties, every year. It was unthinkable, two decades ago, that Barcelona facing AC Milan would somehow become boring, run-of-the-mill. It has. They seem to be playing each other every couple of weeks.

It has widened the chasm between those clubs who make the Champions League every year and those who don't, hurting not only those teams outside of the major television markets, like Panathinaikos, Legia Warsaw and Red Star Belgrade, but also inflicting a deep, lasting damage on domestic leagues. It has proved the most effective opiate of the people the elite could have hoped for, allowing the few to swell their own coffers while damning the many. And all the while, the football-watching public, the stakeholders, the consumers, have watched and applauded and asked for more.

There are those of us who would welcome a revolution, who would willingly see the Champions League reduced in scale -- perhaps only encompassing the top two from each of the major leagues -- and who would, even, bring back the Cup Winners' Cup. Part of this is an atavistic yearning, a naive nostalgia for a past not as glorious as it seems in the mind's eye. But part of it is born from a genuine belief that the way things were was a better representation of the way they should be.

It is, however, unrealistic, as the fact that UEFA are discussing whether to abolish the whole competition proves; a decision will be made on that next year.

That would be enormously regrettable. Not simply because it would starve dozens of clubs of European adventure, but because a few simple changes could revitalise the Europa League. There is no turning back in a sport ever more administered by the rich on behalf of the rich. But a strong Europa League is good for UEFA, good for the Champions League, and good for the game.

1. Give both finalists a Champions League spot 

UEFA, to their credit, have already confirmed that the 2015 winners will enter the following season's Champions League. Quite why they have waited so long -- and quite why it is not the 2014 winners -- is unclear, but it is a step in the right direction.

This is, to some extent, a placebo: the team who wins the Europa League, more often than not, qualifies for the elite competition through its domestic league anyway. Still, it is an incentive, and they might still go further: put the runners-up in the third qualifying round, and seed the winners in the group stages. That doubles the incentive.

2. Play it on Tuesdays and Wednesdays

This is even simpler. Playing the Europa League on a Thursday is damning it to be seen as an afterthought. It is condemning it to a life as the methadone to the pure, uncut opium of the Champions League. So why not play it in a different week? One week, the Champions League, the next week Europa. Easy. And it would remove the issue of forcing teams to play Thursday-Sunday for most of the season, which -- bafflingly, given that they get just as much rest as a team on a Wednesday-Saturday schedule -- seems to encourage managers to send out the reserves in Europe.

3. Eliminate some of the Champions League dropouts

You can make a cogent argument for saying that no rejects from the Champions League should be allowed to enter the Europa League. That is a tad draconian: those sides which come in after the Champions League qualifiers serve to increase the overall standard of competition. But teams dropping in from the group stages makes the tournament unnecessarily complex. They have had their shot at Europe; they have had access to Champions League TV money. They have had their go. Leave them to lick their wounds, contemplate their failure and count their coins.
There would be a secondary benefit to this: the extra knock-out round could be abolished, too. That extra game could be used for an extra qualifier, before the competition is reduced from 12 groups to 10; the winners of each pool, and the six best runners-up, would qualify.

4. Increase the prize money

When Atletico Madrid won the Europa League in 2012, they received 10.5 million euros -- in prize money and television pool revenue -- for their troubles. Athletic Bilbao, whom they beat in the final, got a million less. In total, the sides who contested the competition received 150 million euros.

Diego Simeone's side earned more than Porto -- 7.7 million euros -- had the previous year, and Chelsea got more still for their victory in Amsterdam in May. That is a welcome trend, even if the total pot for the tournament remains steady. But it remains a drop in the ocean compared to the Champions League, where the winners generally receive somewhere between 50 and 60 million euros, depending on the proportion of their national television pool they can claim.

In 2011, UEFA made 225 million euros from the Europa League, and a billion or so from the Champions League. There is no reason why more of that money could not be allocated to the secondary tournament.

5. Make it voluntary

Some coaches -- like Andre Villas-Boas and David Moyes -- always take the Europa League seriously. They genuinely want to win it; they realise that victory in any competition is beneficial to their clubs and their players. Others, like Harry Redknapp, see it as an inconvenience.

This was always odd. They spent all season declaring that they were aiming for a European spot, and then as soon as they had one, they would effectively surrender it.

So allow them to opt out, rather than cluttering up the group stages with teams comprised of, to quote Noel Gallagher, wannabes and never-gonna-bes. With genuine incentives on offer, few would choose that route, but it would be helpful if everyone in the competition was actually taking it seriously. That used to be the way of things. It should be again.