My Post

Sunday, January 30, 2011

Steven Pienaar: Spurs play better football than Chelsea


Steven Pienaar has revealed that he chose Tottenham Hotspur over Chelsea because he believed they play better football. 
The South Africa midfielder moved to White Hart Lane for £3million 12 days ago amid suggestions that the absence of Chelsea manager Carlo Ancelotti at the centre of the Premier League champions' negotiations was solely to blame.
Both clubs agreed a deal with his former club, Everton, but Pienaar said: 'I like the football Tottenham play. That is why I chose them. 
'For attacking football, they put you on the edge of your seat. It's different class. That's why fans go to stadiums, pay money and watch good football. 
'I also felt more wanted at Tottenham,' added the 28-year-old former Ajax player, who met Spurs manager Harry Redknapp but not Ancelotti for talks.
'I wouldn't join a club without speaking to the manager, hearing what his plans are.'
But after three-and-a-half years at Everton he did not need any reassurance that it was time to move on.
Pienaar , speaking at a Tottenham Hotspur initiative supporting the country's top cerebral palsy players for the 2012 Paralympics, said: ‘I wanted a fresh start. If you stay too long at one place you don’t push yourself. I needed a new environment.
‘It wasn’t about the money, it was about ambition. We want to fight and to play every game at the highest level and play Champions League and that’s what I want. 
‘The club is on the rise, the quality is here and we can win trophies.


No player at Anfield can ever be bigger than the club, not even Fernando Torres


Experienced managers Rafael Benitez, Vicente del Bosque and Roy Hodgson all have one thing in common besides winning major trophies. 
They have all fallen out with Fernando Torres. Del Bosque, one of the most popular men in the game, was so irritated by El Nino, as Torres is known, that he made him warm up for an hour at the World Cup final before sending him on. 
Current Liverpool boss Kenny Dalglish will probably not have time to fall out with Torres given that the player has demanded a move to   within the next 48 hours.
Fernando Torres, Steven Gerrard, Raul Meireles
Outsider: Fernando Torres (left) has asked to leave Liverpool
But maybe the striker's past spats and suspect attitude lies behind Dalglish's acceptance that life will go on at Anfield even if Torres heads south to the King's Road.
Nobody has been more supportive of Torres in his short time in charge than Dalglish. The manager was talking up the Spaniard's ability from the moment he took the call from John W Henry on a cruise ship in Bahrain and returned to Anfield as Hodgson's successor until at least the end of the season. 
Last weekend, after the Spanish World Cup winner grabbed two goals in a 3-0 victory at Wolves, Dalglish said: 'Since I have come in here, he has been nothing short of fantastic in the way he has applied himself in training and on the pitch.'
Torres
Down in the dumps: Fernando Torres could move to Chelsea before the transfer window closes
Torres the player is someone Dalglish would dearly love to have at Anfield for the rest of the season and beyond.
It is why he went to Holland to scout Luis Suarez, primarily to find Torres his ideal strike partner. But the way Torres handed in a transfer request this week as the transfer deadline closed and Suarez jetted in to complete a £23million move has seriously annoyed Dalglish and others at the club. 
If Chelsea cough up the right money, there will be no begging, cajoling or more arms around the shoulder for Torres to stay. 
The old maxim 'No player is bigger than the club' will never be more true. 
For two years, Torres was the perfect poster boy for Liverpool. He boned up on the club's history before he arrived from Madrid and lived in the heart of Woolton, in south Liverpool, rather than a gated community miles away from the city in Southport or on The Wirrall.
Local residents would be charmed to see the superstar No9 walking his dog in local parks, just like other members of the community.
But even then the image was somewhat misleading, and in the past 12 months sociable Fernando has increasingly been replaced by surly Fernando, with even the normally diplomatic Jamie Redknapp describing his work-rate as 'diabolical'. 
One of Torres's team-mates said: 'He has always been a complex character. He is so naturally gifted he's always been totally self-absorbed.
'For the first year we'd put his quietness down to a lack of fluent English, but then he'd come out with something word perfect, which made you realise he understood what was going on all the time. 
transfer
'It wasn't shyness, more aloofness. And on the pitch he'd definitely play for himself rather than the team. Even the real pros like Stevie Gerrard and Jamie Carragher noticed it but when Torres is on top form you'd forgive him anything.
'But his efforts for the team this season under Roy Hodgson made everyone notice. His Prozone stats for some games were laughable for a Premier League striker. He has always been admired by his teammates, but not loved. He hasn't endeared himself in the way that Pepe Reina has, for example.'
Kenny Dalglish
Legend: Kenny Dalglish knows what it's like to have the hopes of a football club on your shoulders
As a former great striker himself, Dalglish felt that putting his arm around Torres and giving him more support up front would help.
Workaholic Dirk Kuyt was detailed to play alongside Torres and do some of his running, and the plan has worked to some extent, with three goals in his last four games. But behind the scenes, Torres was clearly thinking about other clubs and on Thursday dropped his bombshell, following Chelsea's interest.
Liverpool suspect the London club gained prior information about Torres's state of mind and with Chelsea under a suspended three-point sentence for 'tapping up' Gael Kakuta, Liverpool may use it as a weapon to ensure Chelsea cough up the right price - £50m. 
The timing could not have been worse for Liverpool, with Suarez coming into a city that is talking about Torres rather than him. 
In the short term, Liverpool cannot do much business with the Torres money, maybe put in a new bid for Blackpool's Charlie Adam, try to get Stephen Warnock on loan from Aston Villa and see if Nicolas Anelka will move in the opposite direction to Torres.
Former Liverpool player Mark Lawrenson, now a Match Of The Day pundit and a man close to Dalglish, said yesterday: 'Liverpool have only three days to find a replacement. But if Chelsea make a stupid offer, what do you do?' 
David Ginola put it even more starkly: 'You can't keep an unhappy player. For Torres to say he wanted to be out of the club by Monday is a big surprise for me, it is not respecting the club.' 
You imagine Dalglish would concur.
Torres the player might be extremely hard to replace. But saying farewell to Torres the person may not do the club any long-term harm.


Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sport/football/article-1351827/No-player-Anfield-bigger-club-Fernando-Torres.html#ixzz1CVal6wj0

Harry Redknapp tell Tottenham board: Don't sell Gareth Bale at any cost


Harry Redknapp has urged Tottenham to break the bank to hold on to Gareth Bale. 
Bale - who will miss tomorrow's FA Cup fourth-round tie at Fulham with a back injury - signed a new £45,000-a-week deal until 2014 in the summer, and Redknapp is determined Spurs won’t become a selling club. 
‘You have to be keeping him here and pay him his wages, look after him. He is one of the players that make the difference,’ he said.
Bale force: Gareth Bale is a target for Europe's bigger clubs
Bale force: Gareth Bale is a target for Europe's bigger clubs
‘When I was at West Ham they sold Rio Ferdinand and that was the beginning of the end. Once you start selling the best young players you’re no longer building a team, you’re dismantling a team. 
‘We won’t be doing that here, the chairman is ambitious and so are the owners. We’re not going to sell Bale. 
‘You can’t afford to lose him and if you sell him, it sends out the wrong signals. If you are going to be a big club you don’t want to sell.’
'We won't be selling Gareth Bale in the summer, it's up to the chairman but I'd be very surprised if we were interested in selling him at any price.
'You have special players in your team and if we're going to be a top team you've got to keep your top players, you can't be selling Gareth Bale.
'You've got three or four players who can make a difference and he's one of those players. And, if you lose him, you can't replace him. Where are you going to replace him? You go and get one from here, one from there, another one.
'When he gets the ball something happens, he can do something that no-one else can do. We can't afford to lose him.'
 


Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sport/football/article-1351589/Harry-Redknapp-tell-Tottenham-board-Dont-sell-Gareth-Bale-cost.html#ixzz1CSKdap61

Manchester United want Ajax keeper Maarten Stekelenburg to replace Edwin van der Sar


Maarten Stekelenburg is Manchester United's first choice to replace his fellow Dutch goalkeeper Edwin van der Sar at Old Trafford.
Van der Sar, who turned 40 in October, confirmed this week he will quit at the end of the season after six years at United.
Stekelenburg is top of United wishlist
Going Dutch: Stekelenburg is top of United wishlist
And Rene Meulensteen, United's first team coach, revealed Sir Alex Ferguson has chosen £10million-rated Stekelenburg, 28, ahead of Manuel Neuer, of Schalke, and Atletico Madrid's David de Gea after asking Van der Sar for his opinion on the 6ft 5in Ajax keeper.
'Stekelenburg is the keeper who is at the top of our wanted list,' Muelensteen told Dutch magazine Voetbal International. 'We talk a lot among ourselves about who should replace Van der Sar. Alex Ferguson has spoken about Stekelenburg with Edwin.'
Van der Sar will sit out today's FA Cup fourth-round tie at Southampton, leaving Ferguson to choose between recalling Tomasz Kuszczak or giving a debut to Anders Lindegaard.
But Lindegaard has been signed as a back-up keeper and Kuszczak will leave Old Trafford this summer. It is even possible Ferguson could sign a third keeper after assistant boss Mike Phelan confirmed United's interest in Rui Patricio, the 22-year-old from Sporting Lisbon.
'We've known Rui Patricio for a long time,' said Phelan. 'He's a young keeper with enormous potential.'
Ferguson paid tribute to Van der Sar yesterday, saying: 'When you get to the age of 40 and you're still playing top-level football, you know you're going to hit the wall sometime. All Edwin is doing is making sure he doesn't hit the wall while he's at United. If I was in his shoes, going out at the very top would be the thing to do.'
Thirty-something: Rejuvenated Dimitar Berbatov
Thirty-something: Rejuvenated Dimitar Berbatov
Meanwhile, Ferguson has indicated that United will open negotiations over a new deal for Dimitar Berbatov, whose £100,000-a-week contract runs out in 18 months.
The Bulgaria striker is finally producing the form United hoped he would when he signed from Tottenham for £30.75m two-and-a-half years ago.
Berbatov already has 20 goals this season and Ferguson believes the player's birthday tomorrow will not be his only 30th celebration of the season.
'He's playing with great confidence and could easily get to the 30-goal mark,' said the United boss.'
Ferguson will take a 'strong' squad to St Mary's as he looks to avoid a repeat of United's only defeat this season - a 4-0 Carling Cup loss at West Ham, where the manager felt his fringe players let him down. He will be without full backs Patrice Evra and Rafael.


Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sport/football/article-1351584/Manchester-United-want-Ajax-keeper-Maarten-Stekelenburg-replace-Edwin-van-der-Sar.html#ixzz1CSIlyiMy

Top 10 Championship transfer window bargains on the Premier League radar


With January’s transfer window on the point of closing, Premier League clubs are scouring the world in search of some unknown talent that can catapult them up the table for the second-half of the season.
But more often than not it’s England’s lower leagues that pull out the stars with Theo Walcott, Gareth Bale, Adam Johnson and Tim Cahill all players that have previously worked their trade below the top flight.
With such a goldmine of talent at their disposal, Sportsmail looks at the Premier League club’s biggest targets currently displaying their magic in the Football League Championship.
Alex Oxlade Chamberlain

Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain
(Southampton, 17)

Wanted by: Arsenal, Manchester City, Liverpool, Manchester United, Fulham
Value: £10m
It has not even been a year since the midfielder made his debut with the Saints, but he has made such an impression in his first full campaign in League One that Premier League clubs are stumbling over each other to strike out a deal for the starlet. 
Connor Wickham, Ipswich Town

Connor Wickham
(Ipswich, 17)

Wanted by: Arsenal, Liverpool, Chelsea, Tottenham
Value: £10m
One of the very few positives to come out of Portman Road in the last couple of years. A key player in England’s Under 17 European Championship success, previous boss Roy Keane has said he has the potential to be better than Wayne Rooney. 
Chris Eagles, Burnley

Chris Eagles (Burnley, 25)

Wanted by: Everton, Bolton
Value: £5m
An attacking midfielder that can play out wide and in the centre.
The former Manchester United trainee proved last season he can mix it with the big guns in the Premier League and that experience alone makes him a big target. 
Cardiff City's Jay Bothroyd

Jay Bothroyd (Cardiff, 28)

Wanted by: Newcastle, Birmingham, Everton, Blackburn, Fulham
Value: £3m
A late developer, the previously struggling journeyman striker has developed into a goal machine at the Bluebirds which propelled him to his England debut two months ago. Out of contract in the summer, Premier League clubs scent a bargain. 
Kasper Schmeichel of Leeds United

Kasper Schmeichel
(Leeds, 24)

Wanted by: Aston Villa, Liverpool
Value: £6m
Still relatively young for a goalkeeper, the son of the Manchester United legend Peter is an incredible shot stopper who is sure to blossom further with experience. The Dane would want first-team football instantly after gathering splinters sitting on Manchester City’s bench.
Adel Taarabt, Queens Park Rangers

Adel Taarabt (QPR, 21)

Wanted by: Newcastle
Value: £7m
His talent is unquestionable but his attitude is an issue and one of the reasons he could never force his way in at Tottenham. But the attacking midfielder has had an incredible season in the Championship and a big reason why Rangers find themselves out in front. 
Ben Turner, Coventry City

Ben Turner (Coventry, 22)

Wanted by: West Ham, Blackburn, Aston Villa
Value: £4m
A towering centre-back at 1.84m who was enjoying a fine season at the heart of the Sky Blues defence before his injury in November. Strong in the air which he uses to great advantage at both ends with two winning goals to his name this campaign. 
Leicester City's Andy King

Andy King (Leicester, 22)

Wanted by: Everton, Birmingham
Value: £5m
King continues to go from strength to strength in the Foxes midfield. The Welsh international has a terrific shot from distance and despite his relative young age has deputised as captain for Sven Goran Eriksson’s side, marking out future leadership qualities. 
Max Gradel of Leeds

Max Gradel (Leeds, 23)

Wanted by: Newcastle, Wigan, West Brom
Value: £3million
Since arriving at Elland Road from Leicester permanently a year ago, the tricky winger has come on in leaps and bounds. Has proved he can handle the big tests after two impressive performances against Arsenal in the FA Cup, even winning a penalty for his side at the Emirates. 
Millwall's Steve Morison

Steve Morison (Millwall, 27)

Wanted by: Wolves, Fulham
Value: £2.5m
Non-League two years ago now a Wales international, Morison helped Millwall to promotion last season and now has 36 goals from 81games for the Lions. Good is the air at 6ft 2in, Morison is more than just a target man. Deceptively quick he also has good close control and is seen by some top-flight clubs as a shrewd signing.


Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sport/football/article-1351418/Top-10-Championship-transfer-window-bargains.html#ixzz1CSFrSv9O

Let me leave! Torres tells Kenny he wants to join Chelsea as Liverpool net Suarez


Fernando Torres has told Liverpool he wants to join Chelsea as Roman Abramovich prepares an improved offer to sign the Spain striker before Monday’s transfer deadline.
Torres, 26, has made up his mind it is time to leave Merseyside and is attracted to Stamford Bridge after assurances that Chelsea owner Abramovich plans to inject more money into the team.
A Liverpool spokesman said last night: ‘Fernando Torres tonight submitted a written transfer request, which has been rejected. Fernando is under long-term contract and the club expect him to honour the commitment he made to Liverpool FC and its supporters.’
Wanted man: Fernando Torres is disillusioned at Liverpool and is tempted by the offer from Chelsea
Wanted man: Fernando Torres is disillusioned at Liverpool and is tempted by the offer from Chelsea