Tag Archives: Manchester United

Manchester United target Cesc Fabregas made available for transfer

@awinehouse1

With Barcelona looking to rebuild after a season of disappointment, Guillem Balague is reporting that Manchester United target Cesc Fabregas has been made available for transfer. Arsenal could also be interested in bringing Fabregas back to the Emirates Stadium.

Both clubs have been informed by Barcelona that a bid of £45 million would be enough to secure Fabregas’s return to the Premier League.

A protracted transfer saga last summer saw Fabregas repeatedly linked to Manchester United, who apparently retain an interest in the midfielder despite a change in manager.

Fabregas has been a slight disappointment since moving to Barcelona for £30 million in 2011. He struggled when used in Xavi’s deeper role but profited when used as an understudy to Iniesta. Problematically for Fabregas, Iniesta is still, without a doubt, a first choice player at Barcelona.

An issue last summer was Barcelona’s supposed reticence to lose a player with the famed ‘Barcelona DNA’, but clearly this is considered less of an issue under the new manager Luis Enrique.

Is David Moyes the man for Newcastle United?

@awinehouse1

Given the level of vitriol fired at Alan Pardew in recent weeks, it seems as though Newcastle fans are finally reaching breaking point with Mike Ashley’s regime. Traditionally, when the pressure is ramped up on a regime, the fall guy ends up being the manager, so Pardew’s time might be numbered.

Since his departure from Manchester United, Moyes has been linked with various jobs around the Premier League, but suggestions he could end up at St. James’s Park have been consistent.

It’s understandable, given the job he did at Everton. Many would assume that a team like Newcastle would expect to finish consistently in upper mid-table, possibly pushing for Europe.

The problem with this interpretation is that this is not what Newcastle fans expect. Newcastle fans expect better, because of what they offer to the club – unwavering, unrelenting, unstinting support. I spent 3 years in the city, and the city’s passion for football is undoubtable. Newcastle consistently sell out their stadium, one of the five largest in the Premier League.

They have also, traditionally, respected high quality attacking football, something Moyes’s time at Man Utd showed he is not necessarily capable of. Time and again Man Utd failed to break down teams set out to defend. Moyes also succeeded at Everton by being conservative, picking up points when possible. He never really sent his team out to dominate a game.

A criticism that could be levelled at Pardew is his inability to get the best out of certain players, with the likes of Hatem Ben Arfa clearly struggling this season. Moyes, arguably, suffered from the same at Everton – look at the step forward their players have taken under Martinez when compared to Moyes. Players like Steven Naismith have suddenly found themselves capable of pushing for Champions League football.

Unlike Everton, Moyes would probably not benefit from a successful academy pumping out talent at a regular rate. No talent on the same level as Jack Rodwell or Ross Barkley has emerged from Newcastle’s academy in a generation. He may get more in the way of transfer budget, but again, hasn’t done wonders when given one at both Everton and Man Utd.

The transition from Pardew to Moyes would, in many ways, be sideways. Pardew has shown his capacity to hover around the 5th-9th mark relatively consistently. What Newcastle require is a step forward, a manager with a philosophy and a real ability to drag a team forward. Moyes is probably not that man.

Why I was wrong about Manchester United this season…

As someone who writes on the internet, there will likely be a permanent record of all I have said until the end of time. That is the simple reality. Sadly, before the start of the season I suggested that Manchester United would not finish in the top four this year, due to some issues that I thought were clear within their squad. Yes, I tend to write about Leeds, but I took an objective view and realised where an issue lay – primarily up top.

However, I wrote the article before a particular signing that people are hailing as a stroke of genius, that of Robin Van Persie. My piece was based around the belief that as Kagawa was, at that point, the main addition of the summer, Wayne Rooney would be forced to play as a lone striker, something that I thought was incredibly counter productive. As I said at the time, there seems to be a delusional belief that he would be best being tied by rope of 18 yards length to the goalposts. He’s a forward and a midfielder, a classical number 10. With Kagawa coming in, I thought he’d be used as the number 9, and I saw this as an issue. It would negate one of Man Utd’s best players (to an extent) and limit their goalscoring. I thought with their poorer displays last season that other teams would lose the ‘fear’ and go and challenge them at Old Trafford, ala Athletic Club.

Like I say though, I try to be as objective as possible (even though it is impossible to be truly objective), and I also am willing to accept I made a mistake. The signing of Van Persie was excellent, a move that no one could have predicted in the summer before word began to break. Here was Arsene Wenger, happy to sell his best player to his old rival. People have written about it a lot since then, but it’s as simple as follows: no one could have expected Arsenal to give up so easily. You’d have thought the inevitable sale of Van Persie would have been to either Manchester City, who have poached player after player from them, or abroad, to the likes of Juventus who maintained an interest. Aside from Wenger’s submission to Ferguson, who could have seen City being so entirely toothless in the market this summer after last year’s success? It seemed incredibly unlikely that Van Persie would be pulling on the red of Manchester at the start of the season.

He has, however, been the difference. A goalscorer will do that for you – Manchester City’s last season was crafted by the signing of Sergio Agüero and boosted hugely by the return of Carlos Tevez from the wild tundras of deepest Argentina. When you factor in the goalscoring form of Balotelli last season, it shows the difference between City of a year ago and City of today. Where City should have strengthened, they rested on their laurels and found themselves awkwardly reliant on a Edin Dzeko, who, whilst fairly prolific, has not come close to the form Agüero and Tevez ultimately displayed last season. Man Utd took the charge.

You have to give Ferguson credit for identifying the flaw with his squad. Berbatov was the hope up front, but he’s not entirely that player. So they shipped him out and brought in the top goalscorer. That’s where I was wrong – they spent to wrest back control of the Premier League, spent well and now find themselves in a position by which their lead looks even more insurmountable than at the post-Everton juncture of last season. I was wrong and I’ll admit that.