Thursday, April 12, 2018

Welbeck gets Wenger out the woods in Moscow

Welbeck gets Wenger out the woods as Arsenal survive season-ending scare


The former Manchester United man continued his fine form in front of goal as the Gunners narrowly avoided an embarrassing Europa League exit
If you had told Arsene Wenger on Monday morning that his team would all but emulate Barcelona this week then he surely would have bitten your hand off. And yet just after half-time in Moscow, the Arsenal boss must have been fearing the worst given events around Europe this week.
Like Barca, the Gunners arrived in the Russian capital with a 4-1 lead to defend, only to find themselves 2-0 down with 40 minutes still left on the clock. Defensive inconsistency is something Arsenal fans have come accustomed to over the past few seasons, and the bad habits yet again returned to their backline on Thursday.
Wenger had named his strongest possible team at the chilly VEB Arena, with Mesut Ozil, Aaron Ramsey and Alexandre Lacazette all starting. Perhaps more striking was his substitutes bench, with the veteran coach selecting four defenders among his seven replacements.
That meant an inclusion for club captain Per Mertesacker, who recently admitted that he would rather not play for Arsenal again because of the mental and physical burden. The German was seemingly preferred to teenage talent Reiss Nelson, and for much of the first hour it seemed that negative attitude had spread to Wenger's players on the pitch.
Goalkeeper Igor Akinfeev and twin defenders Vasili and Alexei Berezutski were all part of CSKA’s starting XI the last time these two teams met in the Champions League over a decade ago. On that night in Moscow the Gunners lost 1-0 after struggling to create any opportunities of note, and it was a similar story almost 11 years later as Wenger’s men failed to record a shot on target until Danny Welbeck’s finally settled their nerves 15 minutes before time.
Until the England international's intervention the one-way traffic mirrored that of Moscow's roads for much of the day. On a day when Russia celebrated the 57th anniversary of Yuri Gagarin's maiden voyage into space, it was Arsenal’s defence who allowed Fedor Chalov to rocket into the box unchallenged and slot home from close range six minutes before the break.
Wenger opted to change things at half-time, switching to a five-man defence with Mohamed Elneny at the heart of it – an experiment that that lasted all of five minutes after Petr Cech palmed Aleksandr Golovin's long-range effort straight into Kirill Nababkin's path. It was another overtly negative move from the Arsenal boss, and though he was quick to reverse his decision, there was no doubt it cost his team what could have been a crucial goal.
For Cech’s part he was arguably at fault for both goals, with the voices of those who believe he should be replaced this summer getting ever louder after a display that saw him struggle with his distribution as much as anything else.
Jack Wilshere, meanwhile, seems to already have his mind on other things. His second successive poor performance featured a number of misplaced passes as well as a couple of customary slumps to the ground with niggling injuries. His inability to influence matches as he would have liked to in recent weeks have justified the club's decision to only offer him an incentive-based deal, and a departure on a free now seems inevitable.

Somewhat unsurprisingly it was only when Wilshere was replaced that Arsenal were able to find a foothold in the game. Though Calum Chambers' introduction meant a return to five at the back, this time Elneny was offered a little more freedom to get forward, and it was his brilliantly weighted pass into Welbeck's path that allowed them to wrest back control of the tie.
Elneny revealed that he had offers to leave north London before signing a contract extension last week, and in providing two assists on the night he showcased exactly why the Gunners were so keen to keep him despite his relative lack of game time this season.
Welbeck, meanwhile, now has five goals in his last four starts, with his form putting him back in the frame for England's World Cup squad. The 27-year-old is - much like his club - coming good at the right time.
His goal along with the stoppage-time strike from Aaron Ramsey was enough to see Arsenal through to a first European semi-final for nine years. In a week when so many threw away their shots at continental glory they live to fight another day. Maybe this might be Arsenal's year after all.

Monday, April 2, 2018

No Bayern deal for James Rodriguez!

No Bayern deal for James Rodriguez, claims Rummenigge


The 26-year-old has a buy-out clause in his loan deal worth €42 million, but the German side will not be rushed into matching it
Bayern Munich CEO Karl-Heinz Rummenigge has denied rumours that the Bundesliga club are ready to meet the buy-out option in James Rodriguez’s loan deal from Real Madrid.
The Colombia international is presently in the midst of a two-year spell at the Allianz Arena and has recently won praise for fine displays.
Rummenigge hailed former coach Carlo Ancelotti, who was sacked earlier in the season, for attracting the 26-year-old to the club, but rejected claims that the Bavarians have already decided to buy the former Monaco and Porto star, whose clause is valued at €42 million.
“He has developed excellently, especially since Jupp Heynckes took over. It was a very good transfer and I have to congratulate Carlo Ancelotti again for that,” he said.
“There are clear conditions regarding his contract and we are not in a hurry.”
Bayern will face Sevilla in a Champions League quarter-final on Tuesday, with the Germans favourites to oust the side that defeated Manchester United in the previous round.
James is expected to play a crucial role for them, having scored one and set up two in Saturday’s spectacular 6-0 demolition of Borussia Dortmund .
In total, he has played 28 times for Bayern since arriving in the summer and has scored five goals and created another 11.
Meanwhile, Bayern are still on the lookout for a coach to replace Ancelotti on a permanent basis, with a decision expected by the end of the month .

Stats : Is this Ronaldo’s best-ever scoring streak?


Is this Ronaldo’s best-ever scoring streak?


The Portuguese has hit 21 goals in his las 11 appearances and Goal takes a look back at his career to see how that run compares with previous seasons
Cristiano Ronaldo is a man on form. The Real Madrid forward struggled for goals in La Liga in the first part of the season, but he is now on the most prolific scoring streak of his entire career.
Although he finished as top scorer in the Champions League group stages with nine goals, the Portuguese netted just four times in the first half of the Primera Division in an inconsistent season start in the competition for Los Blancos.
But everything has changed in recent weeks, and after making his best-ever start to a calendar year, Ronaldo is now on a remarkable run that has seen him net 21 goals in his last 11 matches.
The Portuguese, who was rested for the weekend win in Las Palmas, has now scored in six consecutive La Liga games, netting in eight consecutive matches in all competitions overall – both of those for the first since November 2014.
Ronaldo's fantastic four-goal show in the 6-3 win over Girona prior to the international break made it 17 in his last eight appearances and 21 in 11 prior to Tuesday's Champions League clash away to Juventus.
Never in his incredible career, which has seen him rack up an astonishing 566 club goals, has he managed to score at such an impressive rate, although he has come close on several occasions.
As a Manchester United player, Ronaldo registered 14 goals in 11 games between December and January in 2007-08, his most prolific season at Old Trafford as he finished with 42 strikes in total. In 2008-09, he then netted 26 in total, including nine in 11 at one point.
Cristiano's debut campaign at Real Madrid brought 33 goals, including 11 at the end of the 2009-10 season. In 2010-11, he then bagged 53 in all competitions, a return which featured a streak of 18 in 11 matches (with three hat-tricks in that run) and another of 15 in 11 (11 of those in the last four fixtures of the season).


In 2011-12, he netted 60 goals, including a streak of 15 in 11 games as Madrid won La Liga with a record 100 points under Jose Mourinho. And the following season, his 55 goals in 55 games included 17 in 11 at one stage.
Under Carlo Ancelotti in 2013-14, Ronaldo converted 51 times, netting 18 in 11 games in his best run, during which he hit two hat-tricks.  And the following season, his best in terms of goals as he scored 61 in total, the Portuguese managed 19 in 11 at the start of the campaign (featuring two triples and one four-goal haul).
That was his best-ever 11-game scoring streak at club level up until now, although he did claim 15 in 11 over two separate spells in 2015-16 and managed 16 in 11 at the end of last season, starting against Bayern Munich in the Champions League last eight and culminating in his double against Juventus in the final in Cardiff.
On Tuesday, he will be back in action against Juventus again, hoping to repeat his magic from the final stages of the European competition last season. And the omens are good as he travels to Turin on the most prolific scoring streak of his entire career.

Salah v De Bruyne - who is Player of the Year?

Salah v De Bruyne - who should be Player of the Year?


As two go head-to-head in the Champions League quarter-finals, Goal's club correspondents have done likewise to make the case for their picks
For so long, Kevin De Bruyne's fine performances for run-away leaders Manchester City had made him the hands-down favourite for the Premier League's Player of the Year awards.
The Belgian is enjoying a superb season at the heart of Pep Guardiola's side and if he keeps this up in the coming months and years he could even find himself in with a shot at the Ballon d'Or.
But the case for Mohamed Salah is getting stronger and stronger as the weeks go by. The Egyptian has been a revelation since arriving at Anfield last summer and he seems to be getting better all the time.

The two will be thrust into the same spotlight when Liverpool and City face each other in the Champions League quarter-finals, so our club correspondents have gone head-to-head to make the case for their personal favourites.


MOHAMED SALAH


OK, so let me begin with a disclaimer: I love Kevin De Bruyne, I think he’s a fantastic player and he would be a deserving winner of any award you care to mention.
But… Mohamed Salah scored his 37th goal of the season at Crystal Palace on Saturday. Thirty-seven goals. We’ve only just reached April! He’s got at least eight more games to play. He could get 50, and I’m only half-joking.
“Goals pay the rent,” David Coleman once said, and Salah has certainly been doing his share since moving to Anfield. Every week sees a new record tumble, a new milestone reached, new ground broken. It’s relentless, mesmeric, barely believable. Liverpool fans suspected he’d be good, better than he ever had the chance to show at Chelsea, but this good?!
He’s doing it in the big games – home and away against Arsenal and Tottenham, strikes against Manchester City and Chelsea, as well as the Merseyside derby – and the small ones too. He’s scoring the tap-ins and the lightning breakaways, as well as the sweet strikes and the Messi-style dribbles.
He bags early – he’s opened the scoring in eight Premier League games so far, as many as Crystal Palace – and he nets late. Eleven of his goals have come in the last 15 minutes of games, crucial goals, big goals, like at Selhurst Park.
He’s all left foot, apparently, but he’s started scoring with his right now, too. You can't stop him. He’s even thrown a header in down at Leicester. Only one of his goals has been a penalty. He plays wide but he is, as Jurgen Klopp stated at the weekend, “a proper striker.” And he’s got nine league assists.
With him, Liverpool have a player at the very top of his game, a player who has laid waste to the theory that the Premier League requires an adaptation period. From the moment he walked smiling through the door at Anfield, Salah has been on it.  
He may end the season empty-handed – though it would be a fool who wrote off Liverpool’s Champions League chances – but if we’re judging a player’s performances over the course of the season, from first week to last, then he has no equal. What a signing, what a player.

KEVIN DE BRUYNE
 I'd like to start by pointing out that I have really enjoyed Salah's performances for this season, and I can completely understand why so many people believe he should be named Player of the Year. The 37 goals and nine assists are one thing, but it is that x-factor, the wonderful finishes, the mesmerising dribbles, that have put him in the conversation with De Bruyne (and Messi and Ronaldo, although I think that's a bit much).
All that said, De Bruyne is the man for me. The Belgian has been excellent for City throughout the campaign, providing just as many wow moments as Salah has. Crucially, he does it in so many different ways.
Put simply he is the most complete player in the Premier League, the driving force behind Pep Guardiola's enthralling City side. 
He has scored crucial and impressive goals in big games - against Chelsea, Tottenham and Arsenal - and all of those with his 'weaker' left foot. He thrashed in another left-footed cracker at Leicester which was even better, the kind of goal which makes you wonder what had pissed him off so much.
But if his left foot is the sledgehammer, the right is the paintbrush. He could probably trademark his low through-balls from the right-hand side to the back post, but there's no need because no other player on the planet could realistically copy what he does. Through the middle he is just as devastating, picking apart defences with perfectly judged passes which evade everyone but his target.
He is usually in acres of space thanks to his game intelligence but when he does come up against opponents in tight spaces he can wriggle away from them with a feint or a nut-meg. And if things really get desperate, he's not afraid of getting stuck in.
He can take a hit, too. In fact, the two Crystal Palace players who tried to take him out of the game on New Year's Eve ended up missing the rest of the season themselves.
De Bruyne is the best player in the best team in the country, and there is one thing that sums him up best: whenever Pep Guardiola wants to introduce a new concept on the training ground, or change things up mid-game, it is De Bruyne he calls over to pass on the message. The Belgian understands exactly what's required, he knows exactly how to do it, and he has been doing it all season.





Pep ready to play weakened team against Man Utd

Guardiola ready to play weakened team against Man Utd


The Catalan has told some of his star players that he will leave them out of the Manchester derby in a bid to focus minds on games against Liverpool
Pep Guardiola has told his Manchester City players that he is willing to make significant changes for next Saturday’s Manchester derby, despite the fact that they will be confirmed as Premier League Champions if they beat their rivals at the Etihad Stadium.
Guardiola is prioritising both legs of the Champions League quarter-finals against Liverpool and is ready to field a weakened team against United in a bid to keep his squad fresh.
The Catalan revealed following Saturday’s victory at Goodison Park that all of his decisions over the next 10 days will be made with both games against Liverpool in mind.
And that is a message he pressed home during a meeting with his squad at City’s training ground on Sunday morning, stressing to them that they need to be fully focused on the full 180 minutes against the Reds.
Sources close to Guardiola have told us that he is desperate to reach the Champions League semi-finals this season, and it is believed he told several specific first-team players that they will be rested against United if the European tie is in the balance after Wednesday's first leg.
Those sources have suggested that the Catalan's stance is only likely to change if City rack up a comfortable win at Anfield in midweek, but that is not something he has communicated to his players as he is so keen to keep their minds focused on Liverpool.
Speaking after the 3-1 win at Everton on Saturday, Guardiola explained his position and prepared supporters for his decisions.
“Of course I want to win against United at home but we have three days before we have Liverpool, after we have three days before United and after we have three days before the second leg so few recovery days.
“You have to use all the squad but that doesn’t mean the guys who play are not going to prepare to win. If we are in the position we are now in the Premier League it is because everyone has made his own contribution. That is going to happen. But I am sorry, as a manager, now Liverpool will occupy all my head.”
Guardiola had earlier insisted that City will have six further opportunities to seal the title if they do not manage to beat United on next Saturday.
Sources close to the Catalan have also pointed out that while beating Jose Mourinho’s United is the ideal scenario, winning the title at Wembley against Tottenham on April 14 would also carry great personal significance, given he won the Champions League there as a Barcelona player in 1992 and as a coach in 2011.

Neymar to consider his 'Plan B' transfer - Man Utd or Man City

Transfer news & rumours LIVE: Neymar to consider his 'Plan B' transfer - Man Utd or Man City


Neymar is desperate to leave PSG in the summer and will now consider a 'Plan B' in regards to a transfer, with both Manchester clubs battling for his signature,Don Balon  reports.
The Brazilian is apparently weighing up his options and pondering his alternatives to Real Madrid, with Los Blancos likely to be at the front of the queue to sign him when the transfer window reopens.
And Premier League duo United and City should not be discarded in the race for the forward, with Madrid appreciating they will face stiff competition for the 26-year-old - particularly from City. 

Man Utd blow as Barca star talks up Griezmann move !

Double blow for Man Utd? 'Agent' Umtiti pulling strings on Griezmann to Barcelona transfer



The France centre-back claims he has been in "agent mode" and that he has been discussing the Liga club with his international team-mate
Samuel Umtiti has revealed that he is happy at Barcelona and suggested he is trying to convince Antoine Griezmann to join him at the club.
Reports have claimed Barca are keen on a summer deal for Atletico Madrid star Griezmann, and that they are set to go head-to-head with Manchester United for the Frenchman's signature.
Jose Mourinho has previously been quiet over Griezmann being a transfer target for the Red Devils, revealing last summer when quizzed about the forward that Ed Woodward knew the players he wanted to sign.
And with links to Barca continuing, Umtiti has revealed that he has been talking with his France international team-mate about the club, predicting that coach Ernesto Valverde will have to play with six attackers if Griezmann does join.
He continued: "With Griezmann, I put myself in agent mode! It's true that we talk a lot about it, but it was just to know what he thinks of Barca. If he comes, we will play with six attackers!"
Regarding his own future and links with United, Umtiti has insisted he is happy at Barca and says that he is playing for the club he has always dreamed about.
He added: "Barcelona was the club of my dreams, I joined them when I was 22. It was exceptional. And now, every day, I'm happy, whether it's a match or in training. 
"Xavi thinks I'm the best central defender in the world? I've heard that, I'm very grateful, he's a very smart player, he knows football, he knows what he's saying. 
"As a central defender it's very important to have that intelligence and to know how to get the ball out. In Barcelona I can take the risks without losing a lot of balls and help the team to move forward."
Barcelona are in Champions League action against Roma on Wednesday before they face Leganes in La Liga as they look to build on their nine-point lead at the top of the table.