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Wednesday, 9 October 2013

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Friday, 6 September 2013

New Manchester City signing Martin Demichelis has been ruled out for around six weeks with a knee injury.




The 32-year-old defender, who has 37 Argentina
caps, joined from Atletico Madrid in a £4.2m deal
on Sunday.
While the centre-half does not need surgery, his
loss adds to manager Manuel Pellegrini's defensive
problems.
Captain Vincent Kompany is expected to be
sidelined for another three weeks with a groin
injury, while Micah Richards has a hamstring
strain.
Demichelis had only joined previous club Atletico
Madrid in July after moving on a free transfer from
Malaga.
He played under new City boss Pellegrini at
Malaga and River Plate, helping the former to the
quarter-finals of last season's Champions League.
His injury means he will miss Premier League
matches against Stoke City, Manchester United,
Aston Villa and Everton, plus Champions League
ties against Viktoria Plzen and Bayern Munich.
Matija Nastasic, the 20-year-old Serb, and
England international Joleon Lescott are the only
recognised central defenders available.

Tuesday, 20 August 2013

Revealed: The Premier League reaches an all-time low of English players

• Two-thirds of Premier League players now
foreign nationals
• Only 12 Englishmen bought by top-flight
clubs this summer
• Do you care that clubs are picking fewer
English players?
Roy Hodgson
Getting England to the World Cup is no
easier for Roy Hodgson having so few
Premier League players to select.
Photograph: Michael Mayhew/Sportsphoto/
Sportsphoto Ltd./Allstar
Louise Taylor and Mike Adamson
The opening weekend of Premier League
fixtures marked an all-time low in terms of
the number of Englishmen beginning
games at the start of a season. A Guardian
study shows two-thirds of those on view in
the first round of fixtures were foreign
nationals, highlighting the falling number of
homegrown players in the top flight.
Back in August 1992, 177 players, or 73.1%,
featuring in first-day first XIs held English
nationality but this year that figure fell to
75, or 34.1%. This dramatic decrease has
left the Premier League trailing Spain's La
Liga, Germany Bundesliga, Italy's Serie A
and France's Ligue One by some distance
when it comes to showcasing indigenous
talent and, it is argued, has impacted on
the fortunes of England teams at all levels.
Roy Hodgson, the manager of the senior
national team who already face a tough
battle to qualify for the World Cup, can
only be alarmed that of 61 signings made
by top-flight clubs for transfer fees this
summer, a mere 12 have involved English
players. None of last season's top eight has
paid a fee for an English player since the
transfer window opened.
While this is partly attributable to the reality
that imports are appreciably better value
than their high-priced English counterparts,
deficiencies in youth development,
coaching culture and wider education also
all contribute to the failure of England-born
players to make the required grade. Only
three of the 23-man Under-21 squad that
beat Scotland 6-0 last week started in the
Premier League last weekend.
"Everyone recognises the need for greater
numbers of English players getting
opportunities in the Premier League," Sir
Trevor Brooking, the FA's director of
football development, told the Guardian. "It
is something Ged Roddy [the Premier
League's director of youth], Dan Ashworth
[the FA director of elite development] and I
have worked closely on with the EPP [Elite
Player Performance Plan].
"Ged and the Premier League share our
desire to improve upon the quality of young
players coming through the academy
system. Combined with the work in kids'
football to change the culture and increase
technical standards, and raising the
coaching standards through St George's
Park, there is a lot being done."
The FA and Premier League are often seen
as being at loggerheads but a Premier
League spokesman stressed that, as
Roddy's work emphasises, this is not the
case. "We are one season into the Elite
Player Performance Plan for which £340m
has been committed over four seasons to
enhance youth development programmes
across the Premier League," he said.
"The number one stated aim of the plan is
to produce more and better home-grown
players. We saw some very good
performances from English and British
players over the weekend and the clubs are
working hard to develop more who are of
the quality to play Premier League football."
Richard Scudamore, the Premier League's
chief executive, feels that his organisation
have been blamed unfairly for the growing
imbalance in elite English football. No to
mention the dismal failure of the England
Under-21 and Under-20 teams in this
summer's respective junior European
Championship in Israel and World Cup in
Turkey.
"It's not the Premier League's fault the
country's population is only 60 million and
there are 212 countries playing this game,"
said Scudamore last month. "It's bigger
than us."
• This article was amended on 20 August
2013. The original said the number of
English players in the Premier League for
the 2013/14 season was 74, 33.6%. This has
been corrected.

Aly Cissokho trains with Liverpool ahead of move after undergoing medical

Aly Cissokho is set to become Liverpool’s
fifth summer signing when he completes a
loan move today.
Cissokho had a medical yesterday on
Merseyside and is joining from Valencia for
the season. Brendan Rodgers wants him to
provide competition for Jose Enrique at
left-back and has the option of making the
French defender’s move permanent next
summer for £4million.
Rodgers hopes to hear today if he has
been successful in his £28m move for
Willian from Russian club Anzhi
Makhachkala.
The Liverpool boss wants the Brazil star as
his marquee signing of the summer and is
prepared to pay him £100,000 a week. The
Anfield club face competition from
Tottenham, who can offer European
football, and the winger is due to decide
within the next 24 hours.
Rodgers has also renewed his interest in
Sporting Lisbon’s Tiago Llori because the
defender has still not agreed a new
contract with the Portuguese club.
Rodgers shelved his interest in June when
Sporting rejected Liverpool’s £3m bid,
demanding around double that amount.

Javier Hernandez snubs opportunity to join Valencia and will stay at Manchester United

Javier Hernandez has rejected the chance
to leave Manchester United and join
Valencia.
Mexico striker Hernandez was the subject
of a bid from Valencia this summer
, the Spanish club promising him the
regular football he craves.
But despite Robin van Persie being United's
No.1 striker and Wayne Rooney and Danny
Welbeck being ahead of him in the pecking
order, Hernandez decided to stay put.
The striker's agent, Eduardo Hernandez,
confirmed the offer from Valencia and said:
"Of course he wants to play more, to have
more minutes, to participate more, but he
wants to do it at United, he wants to
defend the title and go far in the
Champions League.
"The interest from Valencia was real. He
had the chance to speak with the sporting
director [Braulio Vazquez] but Javier, I
reiterate, wants to stay at Manchester
United, this is the challenge.
"He was very grateful to Valencia and the
other clubs who called him.
"It's not a question of money - we didn't
even talk about that subject, there's only
one subject for Javier: he wants to play and
be a starter at United.
"He knows it's a very competitive club and
that he has to fight to play every day, in the
dressing room and on the training ground,
but he's not scared, he says he's more
motivated than ever.
"His outlook is the same as when he moved
to English football; to triumph.
"Now, with the new manager, he has a lot
of hopes, a big desire to play and to grow
as a footballer. This season is a new
challenge for him.
"He wants to triumph in England. He knows
that a starting spot comes with working
hard and he has to take advantage of the
opportunities that come his way, like he
did with Alex Ferguson."

Manchester United to split bid for Leighton Baines and Marouane Fellaini

Everton say joint £28m bid 'derisory and
insulting'
• James McCarthy lined up as possible
replacement
Norwich City v Everton - Premier
League
Marouane Fellaini, right, in action for
Everton on the opening day of the season
at Norwich. Photograph: Tony Marshall/
Getty Images
Andy Hunter and Jamie Jackson
Manchester United are expected to return
with separate offers for Marouane Fellaini
and Leighton Baines, having incensed
Everton with a joint £28m bid for David
Moyes's former players.
Everton described as "derisory and
insulting" an offer that valued Fellaini at
£16m, a decrease on what Moyes paid for
the midfielder five years ago, and Baines at
£12m, the sum rejected earlier in the
summer. The offer was made late last week
by United's executive vice-president Ed
Woodward but sanctioned by Moyes,
leaving Everton's chairman, Bill Kenwright,
furious at the valuation and its potential
disruption to Roberto Martínez's debut
season at Goodison Park.
United's joint bid, as with their initial move
for Baines in June, was rejected out of
hand by Everton but is unlikely to be their
last approach having failed to make any
senior signings so far under Moyes.
Everton are adamant the England left-back
is not for sale and want to keep Fellaini,
although an improved offer for the Belgium
midfielder may test that resolve. United's
prospects would therefore be improved by
lodging separate bids for Everton's prize
assets.
Everton's director of communications, Alan
Myers, said: "Everton received bids from
Manchester United for two players. Those
bids were immediately rejected out of hand
as derisory and insulting. The club did not
make public these details as it was vital
Roberto Martínez's preparations for the
opening game of the Premier League
season were not disrupted in any way."
Martínez may return to Wigan Athletic for
James McCarthy in the event of Fellaini's
departure and has inquired about signing
Gareth Barry on a season-long loan from
Manchester City. However, the Everton
manager says the club have complete
control over Fellaini's future following the
expiry of a £23.5m buy-out clause in the
midfielder's contract on 31 July and will not
sell below that price. The 25-year-old did
not attract one offer while his buyout
clause was in place, strengthening United's
conviction that £23.5m did not reflect his
market value.
Everton had anticipated a lower offer from
United after 31 July and it was only last
Thursday, before the joint bid was made,
that Martínez stated: "When you are in a
strong position financially you will never
sell a player for less than the buy-out
clause." Nevertheless the £16m valuation of
Fellaini stunned Everton. The Belgium
midfielder was signed by Moyes from
Standard Liège for £15m in 2008, a fee that
rose to £17.5m with add-ons. Liège are
entitled to 20% of any profit that Everton
make on Fellaini and the Goodison club
had wanted a £30m release clause written
into his last contract.
United have struggled in Moyes's and
Woodward's first transfer window together
at Old Trafford with the club's pursuit of
Cesc Fabregas, the manager's prime target,
unlikely to succeed after the midfielder
spoke publicly about his desire to stay at
Barcelona.
Martinez did not rule out the prospect of
selling Fellaini when he outlined the
midfielder's contractual position at Everton
last week, saying "If there is an offer on the
table then we will have to look into it,", but
will be distinctly unimpressed by Moyes'
refusal to accept defeat on Baines. United
told Everton their £12m move for Baines in
July was a final offer and the decision to re-
submit the bid has added to the annoyance
at Goodison Park.