quinta-feira, 28 de fevereiro de 2019

Chelsea 'defy transfer ban' by asking fans about summer signings, Twitter laughs

Chelsea tweeted to ask fans who they should sign this summer and were hit with the inevitable backlash.. Twitter @ChelseaFC

Obviously gluttons for punishment, Chelsea invited a metaphorical avalanche of scorn their way with an ill-advised tweet published on Tuesday afternoon.

Mere days after the club was placed under a FIFA transfer ban until 2020, the Blues' social media team decided it would be a good time to quiz fans on who their dream transfer targets would be this coming summer.

Naturally, the tweet has now been deleted. But, as you might imagine, the reaction was nigh-on immediate, with the mockery coming thick and fast.

- Marcotti: What did they do wrong? Chelsea transfer ban explained

quarta-feira, 27 de fevereiro de 2019

FIFA hands Chelsea a year-long transfer ban, but how much will it actually hurt the Blues?

FIFA hit Premier League titan Chelsea with a two-window transfer ban on Friday, the punishment handed down following a three-year investigation by global soccer's governing body that found Chelsea had broken rules related to the signing of youth players.

"The FIFA disciplinary committee has sanctioned the English club Chelsea FC and the Football Association for breaches relating to the international transfer and registration of players under the age of 18," FIFA said in a statement announcing the news.

The club intends to appeal the ruling, according to multiple reports. If upheld, the ban would forbid the Blues from adding new players during the next two transfer windows. That means that the earliest the London club would be able to lure new recruits would be the summer of 2020. (Chelsea's women's and futsal squads are exempt from the sanctions, FIFA said.) The Zurich-based organization also fined the Blues 600,000 Swiss francs, just over $600,000.

Chelsea's transfer ban could prevent manager Maurizio Sarri (left) from signing stars like Gonzalo Higuain outright. (Adam Davy/Getty)

MoreHow much will the ban hurt Chelsea?

Chelsea isn't the first all-world club to find itself in hot water over its transfer dealings. Spanish giants Atletico Madrid, Barcelona, and Real Madrid have all been banned in the recent past without much of a negative impact on their success on the field or off.

Even if Chelsea loses its appeal, the delay in the process could be enough to allow the club to stockpile signings before the transfer freeze goes into effect. That was Barca's strategy back in 2014, when it was able to bring in roster mainstays such as Luis Suarez before going dark for an extended period.

Still, there's no question that what's effectively a year-long suspension from the global player market will hurt the Blues' ability to compete against rivals both in the Prem and internationally, even in the short term.

Will the ban impact Christian Pulisic's move to the Blues?

After Chelsea announced last month that it had signed U.S. men's national team front man Christian Pulisic from Borussia Dortmund, it immediately loaned him bac k to the German Bundesliga leaders until the end of the current season.

Because the Pulisic deal was agreed to before Friday's ruling, it will not be affected by it. However, the ban could potentially prevent Chelsea from making the loans of Gonzalo Higuain (from Juventus) and Mateo Kovacic (from Real Madrid) permanent this summer, although an option to buy clause contained in the original arrangement with Juve might provide a loopho le in Higuain's case.

Christian Pulisic's move to Chelsea this summer will not be affected by the travel ban. (The Independent)

MoreCan Eden Hazard and others still leave the club?

Yes. The ban only prevents Chelsea from buying new players, not selling the ones it already has. There had already been a ton of speculation that Belgian playmaker Eden Hazard could leave London this summer if he continues to refuse a contract extension at Stamford Bridge. That could still happen.

In fact, the odds of Hazard sticking around long-term – and this also goes for the likes of youngster Callum Hudson-Odoi as well as veterans Willian and Pedro, all of whom will be free agents when their contracts expire in 2020 – are probably even slimmer now. 

The Chelsea brass knows this. The prudent thing to do from a business standpoint would be to sell those players this summer rather than risk losing them for nothing 12 months on. But would the Blues be able to remain competitive without the ability to replace several key difference-makers? If the decision-makers determine that the answer is no, Chelsea just might be forced to hang on to Hazard et. al. for one final season nonetheless.

Doug McIntyre covers soccer for Yahoo Sports. Follow him on Twitter @ByDougMcIntyre.

More from Yahoo Sports:• Wetzel: How Nike fiasco could be a boon for Zion• Warriors win, no shock; Curry slam, big surprise• Megatron's post-NFL career: Marijuana• Watch: NBA star's wife makes him stop gaming

terça-feira, 26 de fevereiro de 2019

Chelsea has just been slapped with a 2-window transfer ban, but it's just one of many massive problems at a once-great club going backwards

Chelsea FC has been slapped with a two-window transfer ban but it's just one of many massive problems at a once-great soccer club that is going backwards.

FIFA, the international governing body for soccer, confirmed on Friday that the Premier League club was found to have broken rules regarding "the international transfer and registration of players under the age of 18."

Sky Sports News reports that the sanctions "are a result of a three-year investigation" with one of the more contentious signings being the acquisition of Bertrand Traore in 2013, who was 18 at the time. The BBC said Chelsea failed to register Traore until January, 2014.

FIFA found breaches in 29 cases of youth player signings and has been fined $600,000 as a result. The greater punishment, though, is being handcuffed in the upcoming transfer markets and not being allowed to recruit any players until the 2020 summer transfer window.

The club has since published a statement on its official website, reading: "Chelsea categorically refutes the findings of the FIFA Disciplinary Committee and will therefore be appealing the decision."

It appealed a decision before. In 2009, Chelsea was adjudged to have illegally purchased the youth player Gael Kakuta two years prior. FIFA hit the London club with a two-year ban, but Chelsea appealed, successfully, and the ban was reduced.

Regardless of whether Chelsea is as successful in reducing its current ban, the club continues to be struck with one problem after another.

Chelsea was a once-great soccer club

Even before the Russian billionaire Roman Abramovich bought Chelsea in 2003, the club was still a reasonably successful cup team.

However, Abramovich's presence elevated the club's stature significantly. In the last 15 years, Chelsea has won five Premier League titles, five FA Cup trophies, three League Cups, and witnessed wild success in Europe having won the 2012 UEFA Champions League title and the 2013 UEFA Europa League.

Some of the best players in the club's entire history represented the Blues in that silver-laden era, with Didier Drogba, Frank Lampard, John Terry, Ashley Cole, and Claude Makelele wowing crowds up and down the country on a regular basis.

Didier Drogba, John Terry, and Frank Lampard.Photo by Darren Walsh/Chelsea FC via Getty Images

It is a far cry from what the club is going through now, as it got dumped out of the FA Cup fifth round by Manchester United earlier this month and is struggling in sixth place in the Premier League.

But results are not the only thing failing to go the club's way. This is because Chelsea has an ageing squad and so a transfer ban, regardless of whether that is for two windows or gets reduced, would have a massive impact.

Willian and Pedro are the wrong side of 30; the club's star player Eden Hazard continues to be linked with a big-money move to Real Madrid and could be free to leave as FIFA's ban only applies to signings, not sales; and the recent loan recruit Gonzalo Higuain will return to Juventus in the summer, which leaves a dearth of quality in the striking department.

Chelsea also has a coach in Maurizio Sarri who has so far proven unpopular with fans thanks to his insistence on attempting to utilize a style of soccer dubbed Sarri-ball. Though the system worked at the start of the season, with Chelsea unbeaten in its first dozen matches, things quickly went downhill and it has failed to yield the elite results that supporters of the team have been used to in seasons past.

Maurizio Sarri.Photo by Michael Regan/Getty Images

In short, Sarri-ball attempts to use meticulous player positioning, triangle formations, and one-touch soccer which sees passes funnel through the team from the goalkeeper and defence, through to midfield and attack, with very few long balls used.

When it's done right, like when Sarri was at his former club Napoli, it can — and frequently did — look captivating. But it can go dreadfully wrong, like when Chelsea defenders lose the ball at the back and surrender possession to the opposition attack.

One of the most damning statistics that indicate Sarri's method is failing is that only 18.5% of the team's "10+ pass sequence" lead to a shot, or a touch, in the opposition box. This is bettered by nine other Premier League teams, including Tottenham Hotspur, Arsenal, and Manchester City.

But when pressed on whether he will adapt Sarri-ball, or ditch it entirely, the 60-year-old Italian remained resolute. "I don't think so, personally," he recently said, according to Sky Sports. "I'd like to see this football played in the right way, and then we can change."

Chelsea also has an absent owner Roman Abramovich.Photo by Clive Mason/Getty Images

Roman Abramovich often used to be seen in the stands of Chelsea matches, and has even been seen on video celebrating with players in the locker room.

But the billionaire's interest has waned significantly this season. In fact, Sarri has said he's hardly ever heard from him. "If the president calls, I'll be happy, seeing as I never hear from him," he said, according to Goal.com.

The Guardian also reports that "Abramovich has not attended a game this season, having withdrawn his application for a UK visa last year," and there is no indication that he intends on visiting Stamford Bridge any time soon.

With an absent owner, a coach stubbornly continuing with failing tactics, and an ageing squad, a two-window transfer ban presents Chelsea with one more problem it must attempt to solve. But judging from the club's recent history, things may well get worse before they can get better.

segunda-feira, 25 de fevereiro de 2019

Premier League soccer team Chelsea hit with one-year transfer ban on signing players

LONDON, ENGLAND - FEBRUARY 21: Ross Barkley of Chelsea during the UEFA Europa League Round of 32 Second Leg match between Chelsea and Malmo FF at Stamford Bridge on February 21, 2019 in London, England. (Photo by Marc Atkins/Getty Images)

Marc Atkins | Getty Images Sport | Getty Images

LONDON, ENGLAND - FEBRUARY 21: Ross Barkley of Chelsea during the UEFA Europa League Round of 32 Second Leg match between Chelsea and Malmo FF at Stamford Bridge on February 21, 2019 in London, England. (Photo by Marc Atkins/Getty Images)

English Premier League soccer team Chelsea has been hit with transfer ban by the sport's governing body FIFA, preventing the club signing any new players for the next two windows.

The west London club, who were Premier League champions in 2017, was found in breach of rules relating to the registration of 29 players under the age of 18.

The ban applies to the men's teams and does not prevent the release of players, which is potentially more bad news with Belgian forward Eden Hazard continually linked with a move to Spanish side Real Madrid.

"Chelsea categorically refutes the findings of the FIFA Disciplinary Committee and will therefore be appealing the decision." Chelsea said in a statement on Friday.

"We welcome the fact that FIFA has accepted that there was no breach in relation to 63 of these players, but the club are extremely disappointed that FIFA has not accepted the club's submissions in relation to the remaining 29 players." it added.

It's understood that the ban will not affect the arrival of US international midfielder Christian Pulisic in the summer, as his $78 million transfer from Borussia Dortmund was confirmed before the FIFA sanction. Similarly, the deal that brought Gonzalo Higuain to Chelsea on an 18-month loan last month, will not change.

Additionally, the club has been fined $600,000 and given a period of 90 days to "regularize" the situation of the minor players concerned.

The English Football Association (FA) was also found to have breached the rules in connection with minors. It's been fined $ 510,000 and given a period of six months to address the situation concerning the international transfer and first registration of minors in football.

Last year Chelsea's owner Roman Abramovich decided to shelve plans for a new stadium on the existing Stamford Bridge site, after the Russian's UK visa renewal application was denied. He's since taken up an Israeli passport, but has seldom been seen at Chelsea matches this season.

Rules on signing players under 18

FIFA's rule on international transfers of players state it is only permitted if the player is over the age of 18, with only 3 exceptions.

a) The player's parents move to the country in which the new club is located for reasons not linked to football.

b) Both clubs concerned with the transfer are within the territory of the European Union (EU) or European Economic Area (EEA) and the player is aged between 16 and 18. However, even then the player should be provided with education and have their general living conditions taken care of.

c)The maximum distance between the player's home and the club they've signed for shall be no more than 100 kilometers (62 miles).

quinta-feira, 21 de fevereiro de 2019

Rising US soccer star Zack Steffen in Charleston for Carolina Challenge Cup

Zack Steffen never doubted that this day would eventually come.

It’s hard to imagine three years ago that Steffen, the starting keeper for Major League Soccer's Columbus Crew, was playing in half-filled stadiums for the Pittsburgh Riverhounds in the USL â€" North America’s second-tier professional soccer league.

His meteoric rise â€" going from the USL to starting for the Columbus Crew to being named Major League Soccer’s top goalie last season and becoming an established player with the U.S. Men’s National Team â€" has been staggering to some observers, but a natural progression for the former University of Maryland star.

“Life is a process and that includes soccer, especially for a goalkeeper,” said Steffen, whose team plays the Charleston Battery on Wednesday at 5 p.m. in the Carolina Challenge Cup. “I can’t say that I saw this coming as quickly as it has, but I knew if I put the work in I was going to get to where I wanted to be eventually.”

In July, Steffen, 23, will take another step up the professional soccer ladder when he joins Manchester City, in the English Premier League. His reported transfer fee of between $7 million to $10 million is the highest paid for an MLS goalie.

Steffen's path from the college to the EPL wasn't always the most direct. After two seasons at Maryland, Steffen left the college ranks and signed with Germany’s SC Friedburg â€" a smaller club in the Bundesliga in 2014. He was eventually loaned to the team’s farm club and made 14 appearances over the next two years.

In 2016, he returned to the United States and signed with Columbus, knowing that playing time in the MLS was going to be limited. Steffen spent most of the summer in the USL playing for the Riverhounds. While playing in the USL wasn’t ideal for a player with Steffen’s ambition, he made the most of the opportunity.

“As a goalkeeper you need games, no matter the level and I was happy to get them in Pittsburgh,” Steffen said. “The USL is a good league. As a goalkeeper you’re put into so many different situations throughout the year in each game. The more games you play, the more situations you’ll see and the better you can adapt. To get games and get reps, especially when you’re young, is crucial.”

Steffen had a breakout season in 2017, starting all 34 regular-season and playoff matches for the Crew, recording nine shutouts. His stepped on the national scene when he recorded an eight-save shutout in a playoff win over Atlanta United, which included two saves in the shootout.

"He's calm. He's a calm guy," former Columbus coach Gregg Berhalter told Goal.com. “His ability to stay composed, and even if he makes mistakes â€" and he's had very few â€" he's able to stay calm and play through it."

The following season he was named the MLS goalie of the Year. Steffen conceded just 45 goals and was third in the league with 10 shutouts, while leading the Crew back to the postseason. He had a 64.1 save percentage and a 1.28 goals against average.

He played well enough to catch the eye of the U.S. Men’s National Team. He has made six appearances for the United States, making his debut as a substitute in a friendly match against Bosnia-Herzegovina in January of 2018.

He then started in a friendly against Paraguay in March and made seven saves against France last June in a friendly match. He has started in matches against Mexico, Brazil and Colombia, most recently, earning the confidence of the U.S. coaching staff.

“Obviously a proud moment for me when I put that jersey on,” Steffen said. “I’ve gotten some games, but I can’t assume anything. I’ve got to continue to work and improve and not be complacent about my spot. Nothing is guaranteed. I’ve got to go in and prove myself in every camp that I’m the man that they can count on.”

Steffen said getting back to the World Cup tournament is the team’s top priority. Berhalter was named the U.S. head coach this past December.

“I think we’re moving in the right direction,” Steffen said. “It starts with our coaching staff and I think we’ve made the right move there. We have a good depth of players that want to get back on that world stage again.”

Steffen got to meet Summerville native Jonathan Amon, who made his U.S. national team debut last November against Peru, during camp last year.

“Jonathan is a great guy, quiet,” Steffen said. “He’s an amazing guy off the field, a real sweetheart. He works really hard on the field. Very humble. Gives his all to the team. A very talented player, very technical. I think once he gets his shot he’s going to break out and be a fixture on the national team.”

Steffen said the next step in his career is to test himself against Europe’s elite players. That’s one of the main reasons he agreed to go to Manchester City, which already has an established keeper.

“Right now I think this is what I need to do in my career to get better and become the goalkeeper I want to be,” Steffen said. “I’m excited to start the journey in July, but right now I’m focused on helping the Crew win games.”

Reach Andrew Miller at 843-937-5599. Follow him on Twitter @APMILLER_PandC

quarta-feira, 20 de fevereiro de 2019

Ex-Manchester United Winger Nani Joins Orlando City on 3-Year Contract

Gualter Fatia/Getty Images

Former Manchester United winger Nani has joined Orlando City on a three-year contract, the club confirmed Monday:

The 32-year-old joins from Sporting CP on a free transfer as a designated player after a third stint with the Portuguese side.

Nani is an experienced winger who won four Premier League titles and the UEFA Champions League during his eight years with Manchester United.

The winger will wear the No. 17 shirt at Orlando City:

The club's executive vice president of soccer operations, Luiz Muzzi, highlighted what his side are expecting from their new signing, per the club's official website.

"This is an exciting day for our organization," he said. "Nani brings tremendous experience to our roster. He's a dynamic winger with quality abilities to move and cross the ball, impact games and lead the offensive play."

Nani is an exciting winger with an eye for goal who rose to prominence at Manchester United after joining from Sporting in 2007. He went on to make over 200 appearances for the Red Devils, scoring 41 goals.

After leaving Old Trafford, Nani went on to play for Fenerbahce, Valencia and Lazio, and he possesses plenty of top-level experience.

La Liga showed off his acrobatic celebrations and offered a glimpse of what to expect from the winger:

Nani has also enjoyed a stellar international career with Portugal. He's won over 100 caps for the national team and played a key role in Portugal's victory at the 2016 UEFA European Championship:

The 32-year-old leaves Sporting after making 23 appearances for the club this season in all competitions and scoring eight times for Marcel Keizer's side.

segunda-feira, 18 de fevereiro de 2019

Soccer Made in Portland podcast: Takeaways from preseason, transfer targets

The Oregonian's Jamie Goldberg and Timbers.com's Richard Farley bring you the latest edition of their weekly Portland Timbers and Thorns podcast, Soccer Made in Portland.

In this week's edition, Jamie and Richard touch on a host of topics, including:

* Takeaways from Timbers preseason training camp and what to look for during the club's preseason training stint in Arizona.

* Whether the Timbers are likely to sign a right back and designated player ahead of the regular season.

* Why new goalkeeper Aljaz Ivacic has yet to join preseason training camp.

* Whether the Thorns have done enough in the offseason to put themselves in a position to compete for a championship in 2019.

* Caitlin Foord's performance in the Australian W-League and whether she will be able to have the same type of success in the NWSL this year.

* Plus, Jamie and Richard answer questions from listeners.

Listen:

-- Jamie Goldberg | jgoldberg@oregonian.com

503-853-3761 | @jamiebgoldberg

Visit subscription.oregonlive.com/newsletters to get Oregonian/OregonLive journalism delivered to your email inbox.

domingo, 17 de fevereiro de 2019

Manchester City's millionaire soccer stars are in for a culture shock this weekend

Kevin De Bruyne of Manchester City celebrates during the Premier League match between West Ham United and Manchester City at London Stadium on April 29, 2018 in London, England.

Catherine Ivill/Getty Images

Kevin De Bruyne of Manchester City celebrates during the Premier League match between West Ham United and Manchester City at London Stadium on April 29, 2018 in London, England.

English Premier League leaders Manchester City has a squad valued at over $1 billion and is still on course for an unprecedented quadruple of trophies this season, but this weekend it's faced with an unusual challenge.

For the fifth round of this season's FA Cup, England's major domestic cup competition, Manchester City has been drawn against Newport County. A team ranked 82 places below the reigning Premier League champions in the soccer standings.

The two teams operate on very different plains, with Manchester City breaking its transfer record last summer when it signed Riyad Mahrez for $76.8 million, while Newport has never paid even six figures for a player.

Manchester City announced record revenues of $639.9 million for last season, when it also became the first Premier League team to reach 100 points. By contrast Newport County had to be reformed 29 years ago and made a loss of $447,000 in April 2018.

Their vast differences also extend into the value of their kit deals as well. Manchester City is coming to the end of its $109 million six-year partnership with Nike, with a potential $64 million a year switch to Puma on the horizon for the 2019/20 campaign. For the past two season's Newport has had its kit made by Thai company FBT, which produces attire for the national soccer teams of Laos and Cambodia.

Manchester City manager Pep Guardiola has coached in some of the most famous stadiums in the world, but he'll possibly have never seen anything like Newport County's home stadium of Rodney Parade.

The tiny 7,850 capacity stadium is considerably less than the 55,000 Manchester City's Etihad Stadium can hold.

sexta-feira, 15 de fevereiro de 2019

LIVE Transfer Talk: Arsenal want Kai Havertz, known as the 'new Ozil'

The transfer window for Europe's biggest clubs is closed, but click here for all the deals and keep track of who has joined the big boys. And Transfer Talk will continue to scour the world's media and set correspondents loose to see what's on the agenda for the summer.

TOP STORY: Ozil to be replaced by... 'the next Ozil'?

Will Mesul Ozil stay at Arsenal this summer? That is the question. The popular belief is that Ozil will be heading out of the Emirates, which could pave the way for Unai Emery to add Bayer Laeverkusen playmaker Kai Havertz to his squad.

Calciomercato is reporting that the Gunners have been watching the young midfielder this year and, while they didn't make a move in January, are preparing to do so at the end of the campaign.

Havertz has registered 11 goals this season, eight in the Bundesliga, receiving rave reviews. Playing just behind the forwards, he has drawn comparisons with both Ozil and Real Madrid star Toni Kroos.

LIVE BLOG

17.00 GMT: Everton and Wolves aren't the only clubs interested in Porto winger Yacine Brahimi (see earlier) -- Manchester United and Arsenal could also be in the frame, according to reports.

16.15 GMT: More on United now -- the Independent reports that they have identified their top three targets for bringing in a new central defender. It says they want one of Inter Milan's Milan Skriniar, Napoli's Kalidou Koulibaly and Sampdoria's Joachim Andersen, with "Skriniar's camp aware of United's long-term interest."

15.30 GMT: There's potential bad news for Manchester United in the race for Benfica teenager Joao Felix (see earlier) -- the Mirror claims Real Madrid and Barcelona "are leading the race" for him.

15.00 GMT -- DONE DEAL: Derby have signed defender Efe Ambrose, a free agent after leaving Scottish club Hibs last month, for the remainder of the season.

14.24 GMT: Everton and Wolves have made moves for FC Porto winger Yacine Brahimi, according to Portuguese newspaper Correio da Manha.

Brahimi, who has scored seven goals in 27 appearances this season, is available on a free transfer at the end of the season.

13.59 GMT: Manchester United already have one Paul Pogba, so why would they need another one? Still, they've been linked with Lyon midfielder Tanguy Ndombele, who his manager Bruno Genesio says could be like the Frenchman.

"He's strong physically and especially technically," he told Tuttosport. "I don't like comparisons, but, yes, Ndombele could be a new Pogba. Tanguy can play in every midfield role, he's started to score, but I want him to improve there: he needs to be an 8-10 league goal midfielder."

13.25 GMT: Le Havre defender Harold Moukoudi could be on his way to Napoli, reports in Italy say. Moukoudi has also been linked with Championship side Aston Villa.

12.30 GMT: Tottenham have held initial talks with Sampdoria about a move for defender Joachim Andersen, according to reports in Italy, which say Juventus and Inter Milan are also interested in the 22-year-old.

11.45 GMT: Norwich midfielder Steven Naismith, currently on loan at Scottish club Hearts, could move to MLS when his contract ends in the summer, the Eastern Daily Press reports.

11.15 GMT: Manchester United striker Romelu Lukaku could become a summer target for Inter Milan if if Mauro Icardi leaves the Serie A club, according to the Mirror.

10.30 GMT: Midfielder Nabil Fekir, who was close to joining Liverpool last summer and has also been linked with Chelsea, is close to signing a contract extension at Lyon, president Jean-Michel Aulas has said.

09.45 GMT: Jesus Joaquin Fernandez Saenz de la Torre -- or Suso for short -- has been attracted the eye of Arsenal boss Unai Emery, but Tottenham are ready to make their own move says the Daily Mirror.

The AC Milan midfielder would cost €35m, due to a release clause, and Spurs are confident that they will be able to splash the cash more than their London rivals.

09.00 GMT: Espanyol forward Borja Iglesias wants to remain at the La Liga club amid reports that a move to the Premier League could be on the cards this summer.

Diario AS reports that several Premier League clubs are monitoring the player, who has scored 10 goals and set up two more in 23 league appearances. The 26-year-old is under contract with Espanyol until June 2022 and has a €28m release clause. Iglesias was reportedly a target of a Premier League club during the January window.

08.00 GMT: The agent of Benfica sensation Joao Felix believes his client "has everything to be the most expensive transfer of Portuguese football" and "even a candidate for the Ballon d'Or".

Reports in England claim that Manchester United are prepared to bid for the 19-year-old forward in the summer. Diario AS reports that Real Madrid and Barcelona are also monitoring the Portuguese player.

PAPER TALK (By Nick Judd) Liverpool to swoop for Malcom?

It looks as though Barcelona man Malcom isn't keen on staying in one place too long and could again be packing his bags this summer.

Le10Sport reports that Liverpool could take the winger off Barca's hands at the end of the season. The Catalan club signed him last summer after he scored 23 times in 96 appearances for French side Bordeaux.

However, Malcom has found it hard to break into the Barcelona starting XI, making just seven appearances in La Liga, prompting rumours that he could switch to China. However, interest from the Far East appears to have cooled, with Liverpool now said to be front runners for the 21-year-old's signature.

Blanc fancies England return

Former France and Paris-Saint Germain boss Laurent Blanc has hired football agency Base Soccer to help him find a job in the Premier League, the Mirror reports.

The 53-year-old has made no secret of his desire to return to one of Europe's top leagues and is said to favour England, where he lifted the league title in 2003 as a player for Manchester United.

As a manager, Blanc won three French league titles in three seasons at PSG, plus a league and cup double with Bordeaux in 2009.

Tap-Ins

- Paulo Dybala is set to return to the Juventus' starting XI this weekend as boss Massimiliano Allegri attempts to quash rumours linking him with a move away, the Daily Mail reports. Allegri described Dybala as "one of the best around" before confirming he'll return to face Frosinone.

- Eagle-eyed visitors to this page will no doubt have read our reports linking AC Milan midfielder Franck Kessie to London rivals Tottenham and Chelsea. The rumours continue, but Kessie has said he wants to stay in Milan. "I have five years left on my contract and I will stay here," he told Sport Mediaset (via insidefutbol.com).

- Earlier this week, Tottenham's in-form Son Heung-Min was being linked to a host of Europe's top clubs, but the Mail suggests he is on the verge of signing a new £150,000-a-week deal. Son has scored 16 goals in 23 games this season, prompting a second pay rise inside 12 months.

terça-feira, 12 de fevereiro de 2019

LIVE Transfer Talk: Madrid look to pounce on Dybala's unhappiness at Juve

The transfer window for Europe's biggest clubs is closed, but click here for all the deals and keep track of who has joined the big boys. And Transfer Talk will continue to scour the world's media and set correspondents loose to see what's on the agenda for the summer.

TOP STORY: Madrid monitor Dybala situation

All is not well in Turin. After deserting his teammates for an early shower after being an unused substitute against Parma, Paulo Dybala received a meagre seven minutes of action at Sassuolo.

The Argentine has let his dissatisfaction be known, and while Juventus received the message loud and clear, so too have Real Madrid, according to AS. Los Blancos have been interested in the 25-year-old attacker for the better part of three years now, and the disharmony at the Old Lady could encourage them to make their move this summer.

In a summer that could see Madrid offload Isco, Gareth Bale and more, the report states that the capital club are considering a €120 million offer for Dybala. It also suggests that the Champions League holders would prefer a cash-only purchase, rather than including any players to lower the fee, which raises an interesting point.

With Marcelo having been linked with leaving the Spanish capital for the north of Italy to follow in the footsteps of close friend Cristiano Ronaldo, could the 30-year-old Brazilian not be a useful makeweight in such a deal?

LIVE BLOG

09.47 GMT: Former Liverpool defender Martin Skrtel could have been lining up for Barcelona this season but turned the club down in January to stay with Fenerbahce.

"Barcelona wanted to sign him and were insisting on him because they needed a central defender that was a reliable alternative, but the player didn't agree because he did not want to be a substitute for [Gerard] Pique and [Samuel] Umtiti," his representative Mithat Halis told AS. "I think he [Skrtel] is a better centre-half than Clement Lenglet. On the other hand, Martin Skrtel is happy in Istanbul and has an important role to play in Fenerbahçe. He did not want to be third choice at Barcelona."

09.13 GMT: All that talk about Paulo Dybala up above has been scotched by Real Madrid president Florentino Perez, who says the club don't need a No. 9 because Karim Benzema is "the best in the world."

Oh wait, Dybala is a No. 10. As you were...

08.54 GMT: Barcelona have not reached an agreement with Frankfurt striker Luka Jovic but do maintain an interest in the player, sources have confirmed to ESPN FC.

Reports in Germany on Monday claimed Barca had struck a deal with Jovic and would now look to negotiate a transfer with Frankfurt. Sources told ESPN FC that is not the case but -- as revealed in November -- Jovic is one of the forwards interesting Barca as they look for a long-term replacement for Luis Suarez .

08.30 GMT: Brazilian left-back Marcelo says the idea of leaving Real Madrid this summer has not crossed his mind.

Marcelo has been strongly linked with Juventus but has been at Madrid for 10 years and is under contract with the club until 2022.

"Leaving Madrid has never crossed my mind," he told Brazilian outlet Esporte Interativo. "I trust myself more than any other person and there is no reason to leave. If the day comes that Madrid doesn't want me, I will go. If that happens, they can pay me and everything will be ok. I'll be sad but I'll go, although I'm sure that I'm not going to be offloaded."

Marcelo admitted it was hard to see Zinedine Zidane and Cristiano Ronaldo leave in the summer.

"I gave everything for Zidane, we had a wonderful relationship," he added. "I have a very good relationship with Cristiano, I played nine years with him and it's normal to be sad."

PAPER TALK Sarri on borrowed time

The future of Maurizio Sarri at Chelsea has been a major topic of discussion recently. Then the Italian manager watched on helplessly as his side got stuffed 6-0 by Manchester City at the Etihad. So what next?

Well, the Telegraph reports that Chelsea's answer lies close to home, suggesting that Sarri assistant Gianfranco Zola is the man most likely to take over as an interim replacement as Chelsea's season goes from bad to worse.

It might not be a bad idea, either, particularly bearing in mind that a Champions League title was delivered in 2012 by a Chelsea manager with the word "caretaker" in his job title in the form of Roberto Di Matteo.

Tap-ins

- The Sun reports that Efe Ambrose is set to join Derby County on a short-term contract, with Frank Lampard adding the ex-Celtic star to the Rams' promotion-chasing squad.

quarta-feira, 6 de fevereiro de 2019

Transfer Talk: Chelsea brace for Hazard exit, could turn to Coutinho

The transfer window for Europe's biggest clubs is closed, but click here for all the deals and keep track of who has joined the big boys. And Transfer Talk will continue to scour the world's media and set correspondents loose to see what's on the agenda for the summer.

TOP STORY: Chelsea brace for Hazard exit

Eden Hazard's on-off departure from West London could be about to reach its apparently inevitable conclusion. The Telegraph reports that the Belgian is ready to tell Chelsea that his future lies with Real Madrid and not at Stamford Bridge.

Hazard revealed that he has decided on his future in an interview with French radio station RMC, as part of a documentary on his career, which is due to be aired Wednesday. The interview was carried out two months ago but appears to suggest that Hazard already had his heart set on a move to the Bernabeu -- a long-held desire he has made no attempt to conceal as his contract runs down at Stamford Bridge.

His comments won't have created too much surprise at his current club. Last week, Chelsea boss Maurizio Sarri told the media that although he hoped the Belgian star would stay, he would have to leave if his mind was made up.

He won't be cheap, though. Despite only having a year to go on his Chelsea contract, the club still values him at more than £100 million -- a figure that Madrid could hope to lower by making Mateo Kovacic's loan in West London permanent as a sweetener.

Eden Hazard reportedly will tell Chelsea he wants to join Real Madrid this summer. Getty

What would life after Hazard look like for the Blues? Well, Christian Pulisic will arrive in the summer, and Hazard's departure could open up more opportunities for Callum Hudson-Odoi, which could force the 18-year-old into rethinking his desire to join Bayern Munich.

But despite the promise of Pulisic and Hudson-Odoi, the Telegraph reports that Chelsea would look for a big-name replacement for their No. 10. One name they could turn to? Philippe Coutinho, who could return to the Premier League just 18 months after making a dream move to Barcelona from Liverpool.

LIVE BLOG

09.00 GMT: James Rodriguez has been linked with a move to Juventus this week, with reports claiming Cristiano Ronaldo has called him personally to persuade his former Real Madrid teammate to join him in Serie A.

The Colombia international is in the second year of a two-season loan move to Bayern Munich, but his father has talked up the idea of a transfer to Serie A in the German media.

According to Sport Bild, Wilson Rodriguez said: "He has many offers. [James and Cristiano] are very good friends. The way I perceive Italian football right now, [Juventus] would be a good decision."

08.05 GMT: Real Madrid are still hopeful of bringing Marcus Rashford to the Bernabeu despite him being in talks over a new Manchester United contract, according to The Sun.

Sources have told ESPN FC that United are discussing a new five-year deal with Rashford, following the England striker's rejuvenated form under caretaker manager Ole Gunnar Solskjaer.

The 21-year-old was linked with a move out of Old Trafford earlier this season when things were not so rosy under previous boss Jose Mourinho, with European champions Madrid credited with interest.

With eight goals in his last 13 games and in the form of his life, Real will no doubt be following the progress of Rashford's contract talks.

PAPER TALK (by Richard Edwards): Spurs plan summer raid for Norwich starlet

They might not have spent a bean in the past two transfer windows, but Tottenham seem increasingly hungry to add to their squad.

The Mirror claims that the title chasers are closing in on Norwich right-back Max Aarons, who has already turned heads at Arsenal and Chelsea, too. Although the Canaries are flying in the race for promotion to the Premier League, the Mirror reports that Spurs are keen on sealing his signature before the summer window opens.

Norwich have slapped a £15m price tag on the player, but that figure is unlikely to put off the vultures circling over Carrow Road.

Globe-trotting Morrison headed for Sweden?

It's snow joke. Sweden could be the next stop for the globe-trotting Ravel Morrison. The former Manchester United star is training with Ostersunds.

  • ESPN+ is America's home for a host of professional soccer leagues from around the world, highlighted by Italy's Serie A, Major League Soccer, UEFA Nations League and English FA Cup. | ESPN+ schedule

  • ESPN FC's experts ranked the best men's players and managers in world football. Check out the list.

  • Fear, paranoia, difficult behaviour and constant battling with club officials and players led to the inevitable, writes Rob Dawson.

  • When Boca Juniors and River Plate were set to meet in Argentina's most important match, Buenos Aires lost its mind, writes Wright Thompson.

  • No contract has been signed, but a statement from director of football David Webb on the club's website suggests that Morrison could make the Allsvenskan the latest stop in a career that has promised much but delivered little to date.

    Morrison has made just four appearances at Lazio since moving to the Serie A giants in 2015 and has drifted in every sense since departing Manchester United in 2012. The 26-year-old has spent time at West Ham as well as loan spells with Birmingham, QPR and Cardiff City. He spent last season in Mexico with Atlas -- an aptly named side for a footballer still desperately trying to find himself.

    Now the Swedish club will hope that the magic in his boots can be rekindled. And the cold of a Swedish winter can wait. Morrison has joined his new potential teammates at a training camp in Marbella.

    Tap-ins

    - Chelsea midfielder Tiemoue Bakayoko wants his temporary stay at AC Milan to become a permanent one, despite having three years left on his deal at Stamford Bridge. "Who wouldn't like to stay at a club like Milan for a long time?" Sky Sports reports he's quoted as saying by French newspaper Nice-Matin.

    - Spurs are keeping a close eye on Leeds starlet Jack Clarke. That's according to the Mirror, with the paper writing that Mauricio Pochettino won't be put off by Leeds' insistence that the 18-year-old isn't for sale.

    - Italy's Tuttomercatoweb claims that Chelsea had a £44m bid for Italian midfielder Nicolo Barella accepted in January before the proposed deal collapsed. The player eventually decided to remain with Cagliari.

    English soccer clubs slow spending on players in relatively quiet transfer window

    Riyad Mahrez of Manchester City in action during the Premier League match between Manchester City and Huddersfield Town at Etihad Stadium on August 19, 2018 in Manchester, United Kingdom.

    Michael Regan/Getty Images

    Riyad Mahrez of Manchester City in action during the Premier League match between Manchester City and Huddersfield Town at Etihad Stadium on August 19, 2018 in Manchester, United Kingdom.

    European soccer's mid-season player transfer window has come to end with a lack of deals producing the lowest spending levels for England's Premier League clubs since 2012.

    Premier League clubs' player transfer expenditure fell to £180 million ($235.7 million) in January. It is the first time since 2011/12 that there has been a year-on-year decrease in transfer expenditure from England's top 20 clubs during the month, with total spending down by £250 million compared to the same period last year.

    However, when 2018's pre-season deals are factored in, net spend for the whole 2018/19 season hit record levels of an estimated £1.4 billion. That figure becomes the second-highest season of spending ever, following record spend of £1.9 billion in 2017/18. Net transfer spend (player purchases less player sales) was also a record, estimated at £905 million in 2018/19.

    More than half of the teams in the league opted not to spend any money in January and instead stick with the squads they have for the rest of this season. That's despite the next three- year cycle of global broadcast rights starting from August 2019 showing a slight increase on the current deal.

    "As we approach a decisive phase of the season, Premier League clubs' January transfer spending has been relatively muted in comparison to what we have seen in previous years." said Tim Bridge, Director at Deloitte's Sports Business Group, after analysing January spending.

    Newcastle United was perhaps surprisingly the biggest spenders on deadline day, paying £20 million to Major League Soccer (MLS) side Atlanta for its Paraguayan striker Miguel Almiron. The North-East club is part of Sports Direct owner Mike Ashley's empire and has been subject of a long running takeover. However, this signing marks the club breaking its transfer record for the first time in over a decade, when it brought in former England striker Michael Owen in from Real Madrid.

    terça-feira, 5 de fevereiro de 2019

    While Jim Curtin watched soccer’s transfer deadline frenzy, the Union had no news on more signings

    The carnival of European soccer's winter transfer deadline day came and went Thursday without the Union making any news. But that doesn't mean they weren't significantly affected.

    Add those moves to other big deals in recent months — David Villa left New York City FC, Tyler Adams was sold by the New York Red Bulls, and Zack Steffen will leave the Columbus Crew in July — and there's a notable impact. Not only is the league losing big names, but the Union's rivals are losing serious firepower.

    That gives the Union an opening to make a move up the standings as Ernst Tanner builds the roster in his first offseason as sporting director. The Union host Toronto on opening day and visit Atlanta in Week 3. Atlanta is also adjusting to a new manager in Frank de Boer, and a new star in $14 million playmaker Gonzalo "Pity" Martínez.

    Union manager Jim Curtin was as captivated as everyone else around MLS by the frenzy of news and rumors. But while it's no secret that the Union are shopping for a left back and a central midfielder, Curtin didn't have much fodder for the rumor mill.

    "You guys have heard us talk about some targets and needs that we have," he said. "That's something we're working towards. … There's definitely progress. I would say we'd call it forward momentum, for sure, on a couple of things. … Hopefully, we can add a piece or two here down the stretch."

    It's important to note that MLS has a different transfer window from European leagues, because it plays through the summer. MLS' window opens on Feb. 13. Teams can negotiate deals before then, but players can't officially sign until that date.

    As for the Union's current players, they beat the New York Red Bulls, 3-2, on Wednesday in a scrimmage in Clearwater, Fla., with liberal substitutions. Cory Burke, Fafa Picault, and Anthony Fontana scored.

    More important, the team set up in a 4-4-2 diamond formation after years of adherence to a 4-3-3. That was a significant change, and there may be more tactical changes coming.

    "We're going to try a lot of things in this preseason. We will vary our formation. … We've tried different pairings in training and we'll continue to do that," Curtin said. "I gave you a lot of information and no leads on who's winning, because it's only a week-and-a-half into preseason."

    The Union announced their TV schedule for the 2019 season.

    For the second straight year, most games — 28 of 34 regular-season contests — will air on PHL17. Three games, including the season opener and regular-season finale, will air on 6ABC. Two will air on Live Well Network, a backup channel owned by 6ABC that is available over the air and on local cable systems. (Both of those games are late-night kickoffs out west.)

    Just one game is set for national TV: Aug. 4 at D.C. United on Fox Sports 1. That was announced a few weeks ago. That could change, though, as the last three weeks of the season are subject to flex scheduling for Fox and ESPN.

    There's no word on whether online streaming of games will be available locally. Last year, there was no such offering. Online streaming of Union games was available only to viewers outside the Philadelphia market through MLS' national package on ESPN+.

    segunda-feira, 4 de fevereiro de 2019

    Kick In The Grass: Fans Jeer Ukrainian Soccer Player's Transfer To Russia

    It's one thing for a Ukrainian soccer club to lose a top defender, quite another to see him go to a top team in Russia.

    So when Shakhtar Donetsk's Yaroslav Rakitskyy signed with Zenit St. Petersburg, a rival team in a rival country, fans in Ukraine went ballistic.

    His Instagram account was bombarded with abusive comments, most not fit to print, with many questioning his patriotism. Others said the 29-year-old, who has 54 caps with the national team, should never don Ukraine's jersey again.

    Rakitskyy, who has attracted criticism at home for his perceived lack of Ukrainian patriotism before, has stayed out of the fray. Zenit's press service declined an interview request from Current Time, and a reporter for the Russian-language network led by RFE/RL in cooperation with VOA was barred from a Zenit press conference on January 30 on the grounds that he didn't represent professional sports media.

    It would not be the first time the conflict between Moscow and Kyiv over Russia's 2014 annexation of Ukraine's Crimean Peninsula and support for separatists in eastern Ukraine has spilled over into sport.

    Ukrainian politicians made a futile attempt in 2018 to get countries to boycott the World Cup, which was hosted by Russia. A Sports Ministry order the same year barred government financing for athletes while they take part in competitions in Russia.

    The conflict in parts of Ukraine's eastern regions of Luhansk and Donetsk -- which has pitted Russia-backed separatists against Ukrainian government forces and resulted in at least 10,300 deaths since 2014 -- has hit Ukrainian soccer hard. Shakhtar has not played in its home region since the fighting started, and the country's top league has shrunk from 16 to just 12 teams amid tough economic times.

    Rakitskyy took flak in 2014 for his supposed reluctance to sing the national anthem while playing for Ukraine.

    Shakhtar's owner, Rinat Akhmetov, had some of his assets in the two regions "nationalized" by the separatists and some of the country's top soccer talent has left for greener pitches.

    In transferring to Zenit, Rakitskyy will be playing for not only one of Russia's wealthiest and most successful teams, but one of Europe's. Backed by Gazprom, Zenit paid 10 million euros for the 29-year-old defender, who had spent his entire career with Shakhtar and won seven Ukrainian titles there.

    Rakitskyy, largely unheralded in the West, signed a contract through the end of the 2022-23 season, Zenit announced on January 29.

    "I've gone from one top team in Shakhtar to another top team in Zenit," Rakitskyy said in the statement. "I'll do everything I can and put in 100 percent on the field for the team, so that the team always wins."

    Few fans in Ukraine were cheering him on.

    Writing on Twitter, Sergii Filonenko claimed Rakitskyy had shown his "true colors" with the move.

    Rakitskyy took flak in 2014 for his supposed reluctance to sing the national anthem while playing for Ukraine.

    "I just do not sing the anthem and that's it. Of course I remember the words. Just taking that time to get tuned for the game, listening to other people singing," Rakitskyy said on national television that year.

    For those who questioned his patriotism, the move to Zenit appeared to confirm their suspicions. An Internet poll by the news portal Tribuna.com showed 56 percent opposed Rakitskyy ever donning the national jersey again. Nearly 10,000 took part in the informal survey.

    Oleksandr Horshkov, who played for Ukraine and several seasons for Zenit, predicted Rakitskyy could become a "pariah" if he continues to be called on to play for the national team.​

    Yaroslav Rakitskyy (in yellow) in action against Northern Ireland at Stade de Lyon in Lyon in 2016.

    "I think it is a very possible scenario that he would become a pariah on the team, although I would not like it. Sports should be out of politics, but nowadays everything is possible," Horshkov told Sports24.

    Horshkov added that Zenit's reasons for pursuing Rakitskyy appear to be purely for sporting reasons.

    "There were problems in the Zenit defense, especially on the left. Management decided to buy a quality center back," he said.

    Russian sports daily Sports Express compiled a list of well-wishes addressed to Rakitskyy under a headline: "Fans -- Rakitskyy: 'Don't Listen To Eight-Year-Olds. You're A Legend!'"

    Twitter user Milanista struggled to contain his enthusiasm, saying Rakitskyy "going to Zenit is amazing. Will bring some much needed stability to the backline."

    And he won't be the only big-name Ukrainian at the club. Anatoliy Tymoshchuk, who captained Ukraine in the past and even played a few seasons for German giants Bayern Munich, is an assistant coach at Zenit.

    For fans of Shakhtar, it's just the latest in a long drip of bad news. They must cheer from afar, as their team's "home" matches are played mostly in Kharkiv, but also in Kyiv and even for a time in Lviv, as well.

    Their home stadium, Donbas Arena, a state-of-the-art facility built at a cost of $425 million that also hosted games during the 2012 European soccer championships, now sits empty, damaged from shelling.

    Shakhtar sits atop the Ukrainian Premier League with a seven-point lead over Dynamo Kyiv. But the league is not what it used to be, with once-top squads Dnipro and Metalist Kharkiv having been relegated to amateur status.

    Dnipro's fall, in particular, most cruelly captures the struggles of soccer today in Ukraine. In 2015, the club was being toa sted after falling just short to Spanish side Sevilla 3-2 in the Europa League final, the continent's second-biggest competition behind the Champions League.

    Off the field, all was not well at the club. Dnipro owner and oligarch Ihor Kolomoyskiy was struggling to pay the bills, including salaries to coaches and players.

    Two years after that Europa League final, Dnipro was relegated in 2017 to Ukraine's third tier, the Ukrainian Second Division, as Kolomoyskiy's patience and financing dried up. In 2018, the club was relegated again, to the amateur league.

    With Dnipro's fortunes waning, one of its top players, Yevhen Seleznyov, left the club in 2016. His destination? Russia. The striker, a regular on the Ukrainian national team, signed with Russian Premier League side Kuban Krasnodar amid jeers from fans in Ukraine.

    "I never mixed sport and politics. This is just the situation. I hope people will understand," Seleznyov told the Tribuna.com website at the time. "Maybe someone called me a traitor, I don't know. But I did not betray anyone."

    sábado, 2 de fevereiro de 2019

    Transfer window winners and losers: Newcastle, Chelsea, Milan impress; Tottenham and PSG don't

    The transfer window in Europe is closed, but which clubs came out on top, and which suffered? We break down the winners and losers.

    WINNERS

    NEWCASTLE UNITED

    Rafa Benitez must have woken up pinching himself this morning. Squeezing funds out of Mike Ashley tends to require Herculean effort, but Newcastle now have a new club-record signing, and there is every chance that, at around £20 million, Miguel Almiron will provide the kind of value their owner seeks.

    Newcastle have been short of playmaking flair for so long, and Almiron, who bewitched Major League Soccer fans in his two years with Atlanta United, should add that in spades. His arrival is significant, as it suggests that Newcastle can finally land the serious targets that can keep them away from the relegation battle, and they might just persuade Benitez to open negotiations for a new contract too.

    Antonio Barreca, a left-back who has arrived on loan from Monaco, was their only other winter recruit, though he was second choice behind Jordan Lukaku, for whom a move fell through.

    CHELSEA

    Given the state of Chelsea's Premier League campaign, it seems counterintuitive to say they have had a good January. But transfer windows are about the long term as much as quick fixes, and on that count, the Stamford Bridge club scored well.

    Securing Christian Pulisic's signature from Borussia Dortmund for next season for €64 million was a coup, and it might have been equally significant that they managed to fend off Bayern Munich's €40 million pursuit of Callum Hudson-Odoi. That one might be back on the table next summer, but they now have at least four months to convince the player of their commitment to his future.

    Gonzalo Higuain, signed on a relatively risk-free loan from Juventus, might not have hit the ground running, but it is hard to see him firing blanks for long, and in terms of his finishing, he should be an upgrade on Alvaro Morata, whose loan to Atletico Madrid came as little surprise.

    AC MILAN

    Chelsea might feel they did good business enlisting Higuain, but his replacement at Milan, where the Argentine had been on loan, has wasted little time proving his worth. Krzystof Piatek, 23, arrived for £30.9 million from Genoa and, in only his second appearance, scored both goals in a 2-0 Coppa Italian win over Napoli. The free-scoring Poland international, who was playing in his domestic league for Cracovia only eight months ago, looks like the real deal and could help fire Milan closer to Serie A's top three.

    Lucas Paqueta, an extravagantly talented 21-year-old midfielder, arrived from Flamengo for a similar fee after a deal was agreed in the autumn, and while their outlay this winter has been hefty, Milan have spent it on two players who should only get better.

    RB LEIPZIG

    The German club's trusty line of communication with Red Bull Salzburg came good again in the form of Amadou Haidara, an outstandingly multifaceted midfielder who looks a worthy successor to Naby Keita. "There aren't too many players of his age who have so much potential," the RB Leipzig manager Ralf Rangnick said of Haidara, a 20-year-old Mali international whose £19 million move was confirmed just before Christmas.

    Further intrigue comes in the form of Tyler Adams, who arrives from New York Red Bulls and was pitched quickly into Bundesliga action at the end of January. Adams, 19, looks a tremendous prospect, and Leipzig might now have tied down their midfield for the next few years.

    Also arriving is Emile Smith-Rowe, the young attacking midfielder from Arsenal, who signed on loan. Anything he can produce will be a bonus, but RB Leipzig's window has reinforced their reputation as a club intent on developing dynamic young talent.

    LOSERS

    TOTTENHAM HOTSPUR

    Spurs have achieved something novel: going two consecutive transfer windows without making a first-team signing.

    Mauricio Pochettino's attitude to squad building, preferring to develop from within where possible, is well known, but it is hard not to think they look undercooked as they approach the business end of the season. Harry Kane and Dele Alli are both expected to be out for at least another month, and by the time they are back, Tottenham might well have completed both legs of their Champions League round of 16 tie with Borussia Dortmund as well as Premier League assignments against rivals Arsenal and Chelsea.

    It is not a time to slip up, and while the veteran stand-in striker Fernando Llorente squeezed them past Watford on Wednesday, it is asking a lot for him and Son Heung-Min (now returned from the Asian Cup) to provide adequate firepower against top opponents. A canny addition or two would have been welcome this time.

    PARIS SAINT-GERMAIN

    It would be stretching things to call PSG's transfer window a failure, but they enter February with questions hanging over the squad.

    Leandro Paredes, who had been sought by Chelsea, was a useful midfield signing from Zenit St. Petersburg -- and a pricey one, at £34.7 million -- but there was frustration in their long-running pursuit of Frenkie de Jong, who chose Barcelona, and they were unable to land Everton's Idrissa Gueye either.

    They also find themselves short at the top end of the pitch. Neymar's injury, which rules him out of the Champions League meeting with Manchester United, could prove fatal to their burning ambition at European level, and no replacement has been forthcoming. D.C. United's Luciano Acosta would have been an exciting addition, albeit perhaps for the longer term, but negotiations stalled, and PSG's search for validation through the Champions League might be extended by another year.

    HUDDERSFIELD TOWN

    Huddersfield sit at the bottom of the Premier League, 12 points adrift of safety, and there was little appetite to throw money at the problem in West Yorkshire. Karlan Grant, an exciting striker who joined for around £2 million from League One side Charlton, has a big future ahead but feels like the kind of arrival to spark a Championship promotion campaign rather than a tilt at survival.

    Jason Puncheon, now 32, is a more experienced arrival from Crystal Palace, but the Terriers appear to be planning for life in the second tier. Their headline departure was the most significant move of all: David Wagner, their much-loved manager, departed. His replacement, Jan Siewart, will have to negotiate a steep learning curve over the remainder of the season.

    VILLARREAL

    Once genuine Champions League contenders and a creditable fifth in La Liga last season, Villarreal are in the relegation mire, and January provided little real evidence that they will shoot up the table. Vicente Iborra, the experienced defensive midfielder, is a solid arrival from Leicester but hardly a game-changer.

    Instead they have pinned their hope on the return of manager Javi Calleja, whom they fired just 50 days previously. He replaces his own replacement, Luis Garcia, under whom an already downwardly-mobile Villarreal plummeted into the relegation zone. Perhaps it will bear fruit, but it betrays a grievous lack of planning and smacks of rearranging deckchairs on the Titanic.

    sexta-feira, 1 de fevereiro de 2019

    Miguel Almiron Completes Newcastle Transfer for Reported Club-Record Fee

    Newcastle United have signed Atlanta United star Miguel Almiron on a five-and-a-half-year deal.

    The Magpies announced the capture of the Paraguay international on Thursday:

    The attacking midfielder said one of the key reasons he opted for the move to Newcastle was to work under manager Rafael Benitez, per the club statement:

    "I'm very happy and eager to start and to meet my new team-mates. The league is very competitive, this is a historic club, and Rafa Benitez himself were the main reasons why I am here now. I think it is a great responsibility, something beautiful for me, and I will try to offer the best I can to repay the trust the club put in me."

    Per BBC Sport, Almiron has joined for a club-record fee of around £20 million, surpassing the £16 million the club paid for Michael Owen's move from Real Madrid in 2005.

    The 24-year-old has arrived after two successful seasons in Major League Soccer, which culminated in him playing a key role for Atlanta as they won the MLS Cup for the first time in 2018.

    OptaJoe provided his impressive numbers last season:

    Almiron was named in MLS' Best XI and All-Star sides in both campaigns and was also named MLS' Newcomer of the Year in 2017 following his arrival from Argentinian outfit Lanus.

    Roberto Rojas of the Low Limit Futbol podcast and Atlanta United reporter Doug Roberson gave some insight as to what Newcastle fans can expect from their new signing:

    His arrival should serve as a major boost for the Toon, who have spent the season once again battling against relegation.

    Newcastle have scored just 21 goals from 24 Premier League matches this season, and they've only managed three in a single league game once. Only Huddersfield Town and Cardiff City have netted fewer.

    The Premier League will be a step up for Almiron, but if he can find his feet quickly, he could provide the creative and goalscoring spark the Magpies need to secure survival.

    On Soccer: Has the Premier League Transfer Bubble Burst?

    a man in a blue shirt: Gonzalo Higuaín’s loan to Chelsea was a rare headline-making move in a quiet January transfer window in the Premier League. © Andrew Boyers/Reuters Gonzalo Higuaín's loan to Chelsea was a rare headline-making move in a quiet January transfer window in the Premier League. A special message from MSN: 

    The UK's most vulnerable children and young people face unimaginable challenges. We've partnered with giving platform Benevity to raise funds for two charities - the NSPCC and The Children's Society – to try to help turn things around for them. You can help make a difference - please donate now.

    MANCHESTER, England — At last, it seems, among all of the hundreds of millions of pounds that float around the Premier League, the penny has dropped.

    The January transfer window has come and gone, barely noticed. There has been no orgy of excess, no frantic scramble to spend as much money as possible, no broken transfer-spending records, no helicopter dashes, no late-night drama.

    For once — for the first time, perhaps — English soccer has been a model of restraint and of prudence. For once, it has looked not at price, but at worth. As one executive at a Premier League team told The Times of London, "People are asking crazy money for average players."

    That, of course, should hardly have come as a shock. The clubs in the cash-soaked Premier League, with its lucrative broadcasting deals and its seemingly bottomless pit of wealth, had no sooner helped to create soccer's superheated transfer market than they began to suffer from it.

    In England, managers and technical directors and chief executives whisper darkly of an "English tax," claiming that their counterparts on Continental Europe routinely quote them higher prices than they would a team from Germany, Italy or Spain.

    In public, those working in sales or recruitment in Europe dismiss that allegation — two sporting directors told The Times in 2017 that they work "with one price in mind" for a player, regardless of origin or destination — but there can be little doubt that, at the very least, many see English teams as easy marks.

    In part, that is to their credit. According to one executive at a Bundesliga team, selling to a Premier League club is a much more straightforward business than offloading a player to Italy or Spain: The money is invariably paid upfront, one lump sum deposited into your account upon completion of the deal, rather than an instalment plan contingent on a host of clauses. It is also rather more palatable to fans: Clubs in Germany, he said, have broadly welcomed English interest in their best players simply because the alternative is seeing them move, with dread predictability, to Bayern Munich.

    That is not, however, the limit of its appeal. The evidence is anecdotal but nonetheless compelling: Europe's clubs see the Premier League as a cash cow, and its member clubs as rather deeper of pocket than they are of thought.

    There are, for example, executives who tell stories of hanging up the phone to a Continental team and then immediately doubling the asking price when an English club calls. There are sporting directors who recall scarcely being able to conceal their glee when a Premier League team asks to buy one of their players, or the celebrations when they complete a deal for a vastly inflated price.

    And there is the manager who was presented with a tall, black South American forward by his club's owner a few years ago and told that it did not matter if the deal worked out, because even if he did not score goals, "an English team will come and buy him for more than we paid anyway."

    There will be plenty, then, who will see the drip-feed of small-beer deals and loans-with-an-option-to-buy that have populated this January transfer window and believe that it is just an exception, something cyclical, that come summer, the Premier League will be showering its largess on Europe once more.

    It is worth noting, though, that year-on-year spending last summer was down, too: barely noticeable in the raw figures — £1.2 billion ($1.57 billion), as opposed to £1.4 billion in 2017 — but in the context of a global market that had been distorted beyond recognition by the fee Paris St.-Germain paid for Neymar, an eye-catching drop.

    As unlikely as it sounds, the possibility has to be considered that the Premier League has finally managed to shake its reflex reaction to spend its way out of any problem, to break free of its shopaholism, to overcome its addiction to the short-term high of a lavish transfer.

    It would be reductive to attribute that to one cause; it is the result, in all likelihood, of a confluence of factors. Few in soccer, for example, believe that the uncertainty that has infected most British industries because of Brexit has had much of an effect, but it is hard to believe the weakness of the pound against the euro has not given at least some clubs pause.

    Gallery: Worst Premier League deadline day deals (FourFourTwo)

    Then there is the assumption in the Premier League that English soccer's television boom might have plateaued, and that the next broadcast deal will not deliver the exponential rise in income to which the clubs have grown accustomed. That, too, may have persuaded clubs to become just a little more frugal.

    If certain clubs have chosen not to spend — Liverpool and Manchester City for fear of disrupting the delicate harmony they have established, Manchester United because a permanent manager and a technical director must be appointed first — others have been unable to do so.

    In the case of Tottenham, with a new stadium to consider, and Chelsea, subject to a FIFA investigation over rule breaches related to young players, those circumstances are bespoke; for others, the issue is much broader. The short-term cost-control measures established by the league's clubs effectively link increases in a team's wage bill to growth of its commercial revenue; that Arsenal, for example, has not increased the latter means it is not in a position to throw money at the former.

    None of that, though, explains why everyone has been so parsimonious, so uncharacteristically cautious. Yet the trend is widespread enough to suggest that there has been a more fundamental change, that English teams no longer suspect they are being taken for a ride, but know they are, and are determined to put a stop to it.

    England for many years stood as a last, defiant bulwark against the idea that recruitment should be overseen not by a club's manager, but by a technical — or sporting — director. Such an appointment, it was thought, would only undermine the authority of the man tasked with picking the team; in a country that sanctified the memories of Matt Busby and Alex Ferguson and Brian Clough, the manager's position was inviolable.

    That is no longer the case. Of the elite, only Manchester United does not have a technical director, and it is in the process of finding one. Away from Old Trafford, most teams have moved to bring in an individual or a team of people to sift through data, to compile scouting reports, and to assist — to choose a euphemism — the manager with recruitment. The days of a coach being allowed to bring in players on a whim are over.

    It is not a perfect system, but it is designed to prevent a club having to resort to last-minute purchases, desperate rolls of the dice. It is structured to make clubs less wasteful, more efficient. Its corollary is that it attracts managers more accustomed to working with what they have, or what they are given, rather than demanding money be spent to solve problems that have proved beyond them.

    And this is its effect: a handful of unremarkable deals, players brought in to cover a particular need rather than to meet a vague desire, over the course of a month that does not warrant the comic, childlike pomp and ceremony England usually reserves for the transfer window. A dull January is not a cause for concern. It is not a sign of a lack of ambition, but the hallmark of a league that is getting that little bit smarter, that at last is thinking with its head, rather than its pocket.

    Follow Rory Smith on Twitter: @RorySmith.