Thứ Bảy, 6 tháng 9, 2008

Second Mortgages

Second Mortgages: A Great Way to Get Some Extra CashEvery homeowner has been in this situation. After paying off the down payment for a home for sale and having no problems paying off the home mortgage loan payments, they suddenly find themselves in need of extra cash. Whether it’s medical bills, buying a new car, home renovations, or paying off a child’s college tuition, homeowners often find themselves in a bit of a financial squeeze. However, there is hope, as you can cash in on your real estate investment by taking out a second mortgage! Second mortgages refer to a financial process in which a homeowner is able to borrow money by using their home as collateral. In most instances, a homeowner is able to borrow the difference remaining between the home’s market value and the remaining debt left on the homeowner’s home mortgage loan. Depending on the homeowner’s need, a second mortgage can be taken out in two ways. For homeowners who require a large lump sum of money, they are able to take out a closed end second mortgage, which is a one time loan and prohibits further borrowing until the second mortgage is paid off. The other option for homeowners when taking out a second mortgage is to take out an open end second mortgage, which works like a line of credit. A total is given to the number that a homeowner is able to borrow and the homeowner is to borrow small amounts

of money at different times. Many homeowners are reluctant to take out a second mortgage, which is understandable as there is the possibility that they could lose their home. However, home mortgage lenders do not usually want to foreclose a borrower’s home and a homeowner is usually able to take on the added financial costs of a second mortgage. The key is through sensible financial planning. For many homeowners who take out a second mortgage, they are surprised by how easy the process is. While it is generally a bit more complicated for a homeowner to take out a second mortgage, home mortgage lenders understand that there is a growing demand for second mortgages. For this reason, home mortgage lenders are making it easier for homeowners to take out a second mortgage. However, a general requirement for a second mortgage is that the homeowner has good credit. Still, there are some bad credit second mortgage plans available. When choosing a second home mortgage loan, it is important that you pick the right one for you. Second mortgages are available at either a fixed interest rate or an adjustable interest rate. By choosing the second mortgage interest rates carefully and the right length of time for a second mortgage, you will be able to use your home as a real estate investment and help you out.
FROM:http://www.ringsurf.com/online/937-second_mortgages.html

What is a tax attorney ????

When a taxpayer has problems with the Internal Revenue Service, or the state department of revenue, he may be able to solve it himself. However, with the intricacies of U.S. tax law being what they are, the taxpayer may find himself better served in hiring a tax attorney.
A tax attorney specializes in working with taxpayers to solve their problems with the IRS or state revenue department. In fact, they generally focus only on tax issues and relief. A tax attorney can help a taxpayer in trouble make it through an audit, have fines reduced, liens removed, and can navigate through the minefield of small business and self-employment tax issues.
Many small business owners consider their tax attorney to be as vital as their accountant. This is because a good tax attorney can help head off tax problems before they even begin. He or she can see potential trouble spots for a business and can advise the owner how to avoid them.
U.S. tax law is not only labyrinthine in structure, it also changes nearly every year. Thus, a good tax attorney will keep up with the latest changes and can advise clients accordingly. A tax attorney may also be helpful when setting up trust funds, stock portfolios and the like, so a taxpayer doesn't run into unexpected surprises on April 15.
A person looking for a tax attorney shouldn't call the first one listed in the phone book. He should look around, ask friends, or even his personal attorney (if he has one) to recommend a good tax specialist. As a prospective client, the taxpayer should look for a tax attorney with extensive experience in dealing with the IRS, in debt management cases, and in working with real live taxpayers. He should also ask the attorney for references. The taxpayer should also make certain his tax attorney is a member of the American Bar Association and the state bar association. A client should also make sure he knows what his attorney's rates are, and make arrangements for payment early on in the consultation process.
If a taxpayer finds himself in over his head where the IRS is concerned, he should certainly consult a tax attorney. Tax fines tend to snowball, and it is always in the taxpayer's best interests to get problems solved while they are still relatively small ones. Waiting until the last minute to see a tax attorney could be extremely costly, and might result in jail time for the taxpayer, as well as higher legal fees.
Money invested in the services of a tax attorney can be considered a wise investment for a taxpayer.
FROM:http://www.wisegeek.com/what-is-a-tax-attorney.htm

Personal Yahoo

ANCHORAGE, Alaska - Gov. Sarah Palin sent e-mails to the state's top police official, criticizing Alaska State Troopers for their investigation of an officer who went through a bitter divorce with her sister, a newspaper reported Wednesday.
Former Public Safety Commissioner Walt Monegan showed copies of the e-mails to The Washington Post. He didn't provide copies to the newspaper, but said he has turned copies over to an investigator probing the firing for the Legislature.
Monegan has said he felt pressured by Palin family members and her administration to fire Trooper Mike Wooten, whom they say threatened to kill Palin's father, among other accusations, all taking place before she became governor. Monegan was fired by Palin in July.
The Post reported on its Web site that the e-mails were sent from Palin's personal Yahoo account. In one, dated Feb. 7, 2007, it says of the investigation of Wooten: "This trooper is still out on the street, in fact he's been promoted."
Who does this? Seriously, who in 20effing06 doesn't know that e-mails can be found and read by anyone ever? Also, I mean, I have a Yahoo account. But I'm a chick with a web site, not the GOVERNOR OF ALASKA. People of the great north state, can you not spring for an AOL account for her or something? A quality sockpuppet? Good Lord.
A.
FROM:http://www.first-draft.com/2008/09/personal-yahoo.html

Mesothelioma Symptoms

Mesothelioma is a unique disease in that symptoms do not usually manifest themselves until anywhere from 20 to 50 years after exposure to asbestos. For patients and doctors, this is the most frustrating aspect of the disease. The latency period of mesothelioma is lengthy, making the disease undiagnosable until its later stages when symptoms finally begin to appear and little can be done to slow the progress of the disease.
Recognizing Symptoms
Just like any other disease, the symptoms of mesothelioma vary from case to case and with the severity of the illness. The type of mesothelioma - whether pleural, peritoneal, or pericardial - also determines what the symptoms might be. Often times, the general overall health of the individual, as well as his/her age, may also play a role in how the patient is affected by the disease and which symptoms are most bothersome.
One of the most difficult problems with diagnosing mesothelioma and connecting the symptoms with the disease is the fact that so many of the symptoms - both individually and in tandem - can easily be mistaken for other more common diseases like flu, pneumonia, bronchitis, heart disease, and others.
A doctor well versed in mesothelioma treatment will take time to investigate a patient's history and hopefully connect past exposure to asbestos with the symptoms. Patients, however, can do their part as well. Anyone that was ever exposed to asbestos, even if it was decades ago, should inform their doctor of the exposure. That information will not only aid the doctor in diagnosis but will also help eliminate the need for many costly and uncomfortable tests that may be ordered while fishing for a diagnosis.
Tests are being developed that will help diagnose mesothelioma at an earlier stage, even before the most common symptoms appear. It is hoped that these tests will aid in treating the disease before it reaches its most advanced stages.
The Symptoms
As was stated previously, symptoms of mesothelioma can vary, but the most common general symptoms are:
Shortness of breath or difficulty breathing
Coughing
Pain in chest or abdomen
Fluid in the chest, lungs, or abdomen
Weight loss
Loss of appetite
Inability to sleep
Husky voice
Difficulty swallowing
It is the first two symptoms that generally bring a patient to the doctor's office. Both difficulty breathing and persistent coughing are caused by the lung's inability to expand properly due to tumors in the pleural region. The growing tumors cause the pleura, pericardium, or peritoneum to expand, thus allow fluid to enter. That generally causes pain - acute to severe - in the affected regions, such as the chest or abdomen. Breathing difficulties also make it hard to sleep and often result in loss of appetite and, eventually, weight loss.
Depending on the type of mesothelioma diagnosed - pleural, pericardial, or peritoneal - symptoms might vary from the above, which pertain mostly to pleural mesothelioma, the most common form of the disease.
Common symptoms of peritoneal mesothelioma might include:
Abdominal pain, acute to severe
Swelling of the abdominal region due to fluid accumulation
Breathing difficulties
Loss of appetite resulting in weight loss
Bowel obstruction
Nausea
Vomiting
Weakness
Fever
Anemia
Common symptoms of pericardial mesothelioma might include:
Chest pain, ranging from uncomfortable to severe
Shortness of breath
Heart palpitations
Persistent coughing
Extreme fatigue after minimal activity or exertion
Because the three types of the disease are similar but centered in different parts of the body, the patient is likely to have symptoms that overlap. For example, nearly all meso patients suffer from shortness of breath and fatigue, but the pain may be more apparent in the abdominal/stomach area for peritoneal patients and in the chest for those with pleural or pericardial mesothelioma.
Ascertaining a Diagnosis
If a doctor recognizes symptoms as indicative of mesothelioma or another asbestos-related disease, such as asbestosis, the patient will be asked to undergo several tests. Most doctors begin by ordering a conventional x-ray in order to get a closer look at the chest or abdomen. What appears on this x-ray will be the first indication of whether or not the doctor should continue pursuing his suspected diagnosis and order additional tests.
If mesothelioma is still suspected after the x-ray, an MRI or CT scan will most likely be in order. These sophisticated imaging processes allow an even closer look at organs such as the lungs or abdomen. A blood test may be ordered as well because such tests can measure the levels of specific proteins, which might aid in the diagnosis.
However, because other more common diseases, such as benign asbestos-related pleural disease, can have very similar appearances on imaging studies, a tissue biopsy is usually recommended and is often the final test that leads to an accurate diagnosis.
References:
Dodson, R. and Hammar, S. Asbestos: Risk Assessment, Epidemiology, and Health Effects. Taylor & Francis: Boca Raton. 2006.
Stahel RA,Weder W, Felip E; ESMO Guidelines Working Group. Malignant pleural mesothelioma: ESMO clinical recommendations for diagnosis, treatment and follow-up. Clinic and Policlinic of Oncology, University Hospital of Zurich, Switzerland. 2008.
Pass, I., Vogelzang, N., Carbone, M. Malignant Mesothelioma: Advances in Pathogenesis, Diagnosis, and Transitional Therapies. Springer: New York. 2005.
http://www.cancer.gov/cancertopics/types/malignantmesothelioma
http://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/mesothelioma.html

Mesotheliome Infomation

Mesothelioma Information at MesoInfo.com is an educational resource for those who suffer from the lung cancer mesothelioma, also known as asbestos cancer, or who know someone who does.Included within this site are sections describing what mesothelioma is, the role of asbestos in the contraction of mesothelioma and who is most at-risk of contracting the asbestos disease.Also included are sections covering your medical options including information on available mesothelioma treatment, information on coping with this illness including counseling and support groups, as well as information on the legal rights of victims of the lung cancer mesothelioma and how to contact a mesothelioma lawyer. A mesothelioma lawyer who specializes in these cases can more readily protect your rights
FROM:http://mesoinfo.com/

Thứ Tư, 3 tháng 9, 2008

Treatments for Mesothelioma

A diagnosis of mesothelioma is always difficult, whether it is pleural mesothelioma or another variety. Because this is such an aggressive and stubborn form of cancer, patients and their families may have a difficult time addressing the issue of treatment, but because options for mesothelioma patients are steadily increasing, the discussion of treatment is quite important, even if all hope seems lost.
Each mesothelioma case is considered individually and there is no right or wrong treatment for the disease. What's best for you or your loved one will depend on a number of factors. Diagnostic tools such as x-rays, MRIs, CT scans, and biopsies will be used to determine these factors and these tests will assist the doctor and/or oncologist in determining the best treatment for the patient in question.
What are the Options?
Cancer treatment usually focuses upon destroying malignant cells and preserving healthy ones. This can be accomplished in a number of ways. At present, mesothelioma patients are faced with three major options for treatment of their disease - surgery, radiation, and chemotherapy. What course of treatment is recommended will largely depend on these issues:
The type of mesothelioma and location of the tumor
The size of the tumor(s)
The degree to which the cancer has spread or metastasized
The stage of the cancer - beginning, advanced, etc.
The age of the patient
The overall physical health of the patient
Setting up any type of treatment may involve seeing a variety of doctorsincluding an oncologist (cancer specialist), pulmonologist (lung specialist), or radiologist. Patience is sometimes necessary, but doctors will no doubt set up treatment as soon as possible after diagnosis.
FROM:http://www.maacenter.org/treatment/

Thứ Ba, 2 tháng 9, 2008

Kevin Keegan on the brink of Newcastle exit

Newcastle United manager Kevin Keegan is on the brink of leaving the club today after holding a meeting with club owner Mike Ashley.
Sources within St James' Park claim that Keegan has already left the club, although there is no official confirmation yet.
Speculation mounted all morning that Keegan’s second reign as Newcastle boss was drawing to a close after his main transfer targets failed to materialise when the window closed at midnight.
He is also thought to be unhappy with the restructuring of the club that included the appointment of Dennis Wise as executive director of football.
Keegan recently claimed James Milner would not be sold - only for the midfielder to join Aston Villa in a £12million deal. He asked Newcastle United supporters angered by the move to reserve their judgment until after the transfer deadline had passed.
Having been unable to add to the signings of Argentinian pair Fabricio Coloccini and Jonas Gutierrez with several big-name stars, Keegan is believed to have become disillusioned with his lot at Newcastle.
Keegan returned to Newcastle as manager in January 2008 after the departure of Sam Allardyce, having previously held the post between 1992 and 1997.

FROM:TIMES

Manchester City pounce with £34.2m deal for Robinho

English football embraced a new superpower last night as Manchester City, who are on the brink of becoming the richest club in the world, outbid Chelsea with a British record offer of £34.2 million to sign Robinho, the Real Madrid and Brazil forward.
And on a truly extraordinary day in the Barclays Premier League, Manchester United finally got their man when they agreed to sign Dimitar Berbatov from Tottenham Hotspur. The London club also got what they wanted with a fee of £30.75 million for the Bulgaria striker and the loan of Fraizer Campbell, the United forward, for a season.
City wasted no time flexing their newfound financial muscle as Thaksin Shinawatra moved closer to selling the club for £200 million to an Arab royal family understood to be considerably richer than Roman Abramovich, the Russian billionaire Chelsea owner.
Robinho has signed a four-year deal worth £95,000 a week after tax, effectively trebling the wages he was earning at Real. Mark Hughes, the City manager, said: “We have been in the market today for Robinho and I think people understand now that there is another club with the financial power to compete for any player in the world and that’s Manchester City.”
Having sparked a remarkable tug-of-war with United for Berbatov after lodging a late £32.5 million bid for the Bulgaria striker, City switched their attentions to Robinho when it became clear that Berbatov favoured a move to Old Trafford. Robinho is understood to have threatened to stay in Brazil for two years unless he was allowed to leave Real.
It is rare that Abramovich is trumped in the transfer market, but with the Chelsea owner refusing to increase his bid of £29 million for Robinho, City landed the player in a stunning coup as the landscape of English football prepared to undergo monumental change for the second time in five years.
The figure eclipsed the record £30.4 million that Chelsea paid AC Milan for Andriy Shevchenko two years ago.
With their club seemingly on the brink of financial turmoil only a few weeks ago, City supporters awoke yesterday to the news that the club was on the verge of being sold for the second time in just over a year.
Thaksin, who is seeking political asylum in Britain as he refuses to answer corruption charges in his native Thailand where he was Prime Minister, has agreed to sell City to the Abu Dhabi United Group for Development and Investment (ADUG) for £200 million.
The Times understands that the ultimate prospective owners of City are members of the ruling family of Abu Dhabi, the oil-rich Gulf state. The Al Nahyan family’s total holding is said to run to more than £26 billion.
Outlining their intentions in an interview with The Times yesterday, Dr Sulaiman Al-Fahim, a prominent Middle East businessman who has been leading the prospective takeover, made clear that the aim was to turn City into the next Chelsea.
“We are looking to make the same kind of impact at Manchester City that has happened at Chelsea,” Al-Fahim said. “That is what we want and we think it is achievable. The target is to finish in the top four this season and then challenge for the Premier League title next year.”
Al-Fahim said that they would not hesitate to spend £200 million next summer if it was deemed necessary, although claims that the club also bid for David Villa and Mario Gomez, the Valencia and VfB Stuttgart forwards respectively, were understood to be wide of the mark. The due-diligence process could be completed by the end of the week.
United’s capture of Berbatov and Campbell’s loan move in the other direction also negated any threat of legal action by Spurs against United, who had in recent weeks expressed outrage at the manner of the Premier League champions’ approach to negotiations for Berbatov.

FROM:TIMES

Mark Hughes claims Robinho deal signal of intent from Manchester City

Mark Hughes believes that the capture of Robinho for a British record fee of £34.2 million has underlined the ambition of Manchester City’s prospective new owners as they look to transform the club into challengers for the Premier League title.
City beat Chelsea to the signing of Robinho last night after outbidding the West London club and Hughes believes that the arrival of the Brazil forward, who has agreed a four-year contract worth £95,000 a week, heralds a new era in the history of the club.
“We’re obviously at a different stage of development than the clubs we’re going up against, but sometimes players look at different situations and say that’s one I want to follow and that’s what we’ll try to emphasise to people,” the manager said. “We’re a club going places and hopefully players will want to be part of it.”
Abu Dhabi United Group for Development and Investment (ADUG), which is understood to be an investment vehicle for the ruling family of Abu Dhabi, the Gulf state, are expected to complete a £200 million takeover of City by the end of the week after Thaksin Shinawatra agreed to sell the club. And Hughes believes that, with such backing, City will be able to compete with the likes of Manchester United and Chelsea.

“I came to the club on the premise that I would be given resources to really compete,” he said. “Dr Thaksin was not able to do that with his situation \ but he has brought people to the table that will hopefully allow me to compete for the Premier League and in Europe. All the promises I was made when I left Blackburn have been fulfilled at this point.”
Although City also bid £32.5 million for Dimitar Berbatov, the Tottenham Hotspur forward, Hughes claimed that Robinho was the signing he wanted. “It’s a fantastic signing for us. If we want to go to the places we expect to and are going to compete against outstanding teams and clubs then we have to attract world-class players and that is what we have been able to do this evening.
“He’s exceptionally talented. He’s one of those players who can excite stadiums and who opposition players will fear. You only need to look at the clubs who coveted him and who he played for to know that. We’re delighted and looking forward to seeing him in a Manchester City shirt.”

FROM:TIMES

Sulaiman Al-Fahim aiming to become Manchester City's answer to Roman Abramovich

Dr Sulaiman Al-Fahim, the businessman behind the takeover of Manchester City, says there is no limit to his ambition for the club, adding that he aims to replicate the impact of Roman Abramovich.
With the due-diligence process expected to be completed by the end of the week, Al-Fahim's Abu Dhabi United Group (ADUG) will become the majority shareholders of the club and Al-Fahim has already said he would not hesitate to spend £200 million next summer if it was deemed necessary.
"We would like to see Manchester City fighting for trophies in every tournament," Al-Fahim said. “We are looking to make the same kind of impact at Manchester City that has happened at Chelsea."
"We don't just want Manchester City to be challenging for trophies in England, but also in the Champions League. We want them to be in for every trophy available."
City wasted no time flexing their newfound financial muscle yesterday, outbidding Chelsea with a British record offer of £34.2m to sign Robinho. The Real Madrid and Brazil forward signed a four-year deal worth £95,000 a week after tax, effectively trebling the wages he was earning at Real.
Mark Hughes, the City manager, said: “We have been in the market today for Robinho and I think people understand now that there is another club with the financial power to compete for any player in the world and that’s Manchester City.”
Hughes has already been charged with qualifying for next season's Champions League and Al-Fahim says the new owners expect this term to be a vast improvement on last season's ninth place finish in the Premier League.
"A place in the Champions League is quite a jump from last season, but we are ready to sit down with the manager, find out the players he would like, and bring the right players into the club," Al-Fahim added.
"This season we would like to be a lot better than last season, and we are eager for trophies next season."
City face Chelsea at Eastlands in their next league match a week on Sunday and Al-Fahim says he hopes to attend that game, as he looks to finalise the details of the takeover.
"Our message to the fans would be we promise we are here to sustain the club and make Manchester City competitive for trophies at the highest level," Al-Fahim said. "We would also like to bring in extra revenues by introducing new marketing ideas.
"Looking at the club, they have a lot of fans, they are loyal fans, and there is the opportunity to grow there. They also have a lot of history. It was all very attractive to us. I think the one thing that has been missing was the right person to provide the right investment."
FROM:TIMES

Thứ Năm, 28 tháng 8, 2008

Monte Carlo ideal venue as Manchester United look to break bank for Berbatov

With time running out before the transfer window closes, Manchester United hope to engineer a breakthrough in their pursuit of Dimitar Berbatov in the next 48 hours.
Sir Alex Ferguson and his squad travel to Monaco today in advance of the Champions League draw this evening and the European Super Cup tomorrow, but there is also the possibility of face-to-face negotiations between the United hierarchy and Tottenham Hotspur officials in Monte Carlo.
Dialogue between the clubs has been minimal since United first expressed interest in Berbatov at the start of the summer, but Tottenham, having lined up a deal to replace him with Roman Pavlyuchenko, now appear ready to talk. The expected £28 million deal for Berbatov should move closer over the coming days, with a strong possibility that David Gill, the United chief executive, will discuss the matter with Damien Comolli, the Tottenham sporting director, while they are in Monaco, the latter as part of the London club’s delegation for the Uefa Cup draw.

Tottenham maintain that they will not sell for less than £30 million and believe that their bargaining position has been strengthened by the formal complaint they have made to the Premier League regarding an alleged illegal approach for Berbatov.
United, while vehemently protesting their innocence, accept that the complaint has added another unwelcome dimension to a complicated deal, but they firmly expect to complete the transfer and for Tottenham to drop their complaint once an agreement has been reached, as they did with Liverpool over Robbie Keane earlier in the summer.
What is certain is that Berbatov will have more of an eye on this evening’s Champions League draw at the Grimaldi Forum than tomorrow’s Uefa Cup equivalent. The Bulgaria forward has no intention of staying at White Hart Lane, having formally requested a transfer 13 days ago and since been left out of the squad for the home defeat by Sunderland. He has been shunned by some of his team-mates since returning to training this week and, with Juande Ramos, the head coach, having seemingly captured Pavlyuchenko from Spartak Moscow, Tottenham’s stance is no longer anything like so defiant.
Tottenham also maintain an interest in Andrei Arshavin, the playmaking star of Zenit St Petersburg, United’s opponents at the Stade Louis II tomorrow evening. That, after the Community Shield, is the second of seven trophies that Ferguson has talked of winning this season, but, as ever, the Champions League is a top priority.
This evening’s draw will give some indication of the task ahead for England’s contingent, with United and Chelsea having been installed as the bookmakers’ favourites, three months after contesting the final in Moscow. Celtic’s place in the group stage, as Clydesdale Bank Premier League champions, was already assured, but not so Rangers, who fell to FBK Kaunas, of Lithuania, earlier in the qualifying campaign.
There is a strong chance that Celtic, among the third group of seeds, could be drawn against any of the Premier League entrants, who will be eager to avoid clubs such as Fiorentina and Atlético Madrid, who are lurking among the lower seeds.
This evening’s draw will be preceded by an awards ceremony from last season’s Champions League, won by United. Ferguson is firmly expected to win the coach-of-the-year award and Cristiano Ronaldo the club footballer of the year, while Edwin van der Sar, Rio Ferdinand, Paul Scholes and Ronaldo will be among the favourites to win their respective categories.
Of the 20 players nominated for awards, no fewer than 17 play for Premier League clubs, with six from United, five from Chelsea, four from Liverpool and two from Arsenal, reflecting their domination of last season’s tournament.
The only other candidates are Manuel Neuer, the Schalke 04 goalkeeper, Carles Puyol, the Barcelona defender, and Lionel Messi, the Barcelona forward.
How the draw works
Pot one Chelsea, Liverpool*, Barcelona, Arsenal, Manchester United, Lyons, Inter Milan, Real Madrid
Pot two Bayern Munich, PSV Eindhoven, Villarreal, AS Roma, FC Porto, Werder Bremen, Sporting Lisbon, Juventus
Pot three Marseilles, Zenit St Petersburg, Steaua Bucharest, Panathinaikos, Bordeaux, Celtic, FC Basle, Fenerbahçe
Pot four Shakhtar Donetsk, Fiorentina, Atlético Madrid, Dynamo Kiev, Standard Liège*, CRF Cluj, AaB Aalborg, Anorthosis Famagusta, BATE Borisov
* Extra time being played
Clubs are drawn in eight groups of four, with teams playing each other home and away and the top two clubs progressing to the last 16, at which point the tournament reverts to a knockout format. Clubs from the same country cannot be drawn against each other in the group stage.

FROM:TIMESONLINES

Thứ Sáu, 22 tháng 8, 2008

Thaksin Shinawatra offers to resign as pressure grows

“The term 'fit and proper' is a pretty broad one. I mean, is he a nice guy? Yes. Is he a great guy to play golf with? Yes. Has he got the finances to run a football club? Yes. I really care about those three things. Whether he is guilty of something over there, I can't worry too much about that.”
The man in question is Thaksin Shinawatra, the former Prime Minister of Thailand, who is holed up in Surrey, seeking political asylum in Britain, after refusing to face corruption charges in his homeland earlier this month. The man doing the talking and, one suspects, the caddying, is Garry Cook, appointed by Thaksin as executive chairman of Manchester City with the mission of delivering his vision of a club that is the equal of its neighbour.
First things first: according to Cook, Thaksin is “embarrassed” about the damage that his legal, political and financial circumstances have inflicted upon City of late; Thaksin has offered to resign from the club's board in order to alleviate growing pressure from the Premier League, whose “fit and proper person” test he no longer seems to satisfy; Thaksin is close to selling a significant minority stake in City to another Asian tycoon who will help to bankroll the club while £800million of his own assets remain frozen in Thailand.
The financial picture at City is far healthier than it appears from the outside, despite a recent flurry of borrowing from the banks and from John Wardle, the former chairman. Thaksin recognises that he made mistakes last summer and is prepared to be realistic, rather than ruthless, with Mark Hughes, the new manager. Even if no outside investment is forthcoming before the transfer window closes in nine days, Hughes has money to spend on new players.
Cook's intention was to assure the media and, by extension, the club's supporters, and holding court at the City of Manchester Stadium this week, he did that. But he also talked about the pressing need to sign a superstar in order to satisfy his and Thaksin's global ambitions and expressed disapproval of a City veteran team's use of the club's “intellectual property” in a Masters tournament.
He also predicted that the club not only could, but would, become as big as Manchester United and, to the horror of the traditionalists among us, declared that, in order to embrace the challenges of globalisation, he would favour a 14-club breakaway Premier League with no promotion and no relegation. With City in it, presumably.
Football is changing and, in Cook, an intelligent, dynamic executive who was born in Birmingham but has spent much of his working life in the United States as a creative force behind the expansion of the Nike brand, Thaksin has found a man to help City embrace those changes.
Is that a good thing or a bad thing? Put it this way, Richard Scudamore, the Premier League chief executive, has found a kindred spirit. Where he and Scudamore differ is on the subject of Thaksin, but Cook and the owner are in constant discussion with the league to try to find ways around the “fit and proper” hurdle.
“Dr Thaksin has been really open about this,” Cook said. “The man is embarrassed about the indignity brought on the club and on the league. He never intended for this to be the case. He has said to me: ‘If you need me to resign as a director to serve the needs of the Premier League, I'm fine with that as long as it doesn't change anything else.' There is this fit and proper person's test and that's one of the reasons why we would maybe look to take him off the board as a director.
“We're talking about a lot of things. We've talked about restructuring the board and selling part of his stake to an equity partner, who could come in and take some of the pressure away.
“Three months ago, the situation was very different and then it took a turn [the corruption charges and Thaksin's refusal to face them] that changed the whole aspect of it. We've talked about many different options. One thing we're adamant about is not giving up the majority stake-holding. And we're not looking at [selling to] institutions. It's a friend of a friend.”
Cook suggested that investment could be secured within days, giving Hughes further room for manoeuvre before the transfer window closes on September 1. Hughes would be forgiven for regretting his decision to leave the comfort of Ewood Park for the madness of City, but Cook said that he did not mislead the manager about the situation that he was coming into.
“I actually painted a picture of instability for Mark,” he said. “We told him there was plenty of money to spend on players, but that we had taken in some players that weren't right for the club. Our acquisition and disposal strategy was wrong and it is still coming back to bite us a little bit.
“We have talked about the need to sign a superstar, a global franchise entity. We went after Ronaldinho and we nearly got him. We told Mark not to come here if he thought we didn't need a superstar. I know people are going to say: ‘Here we go again, another guy from America telling us how it should be'.
“But in the intellectual property world of running a football club, when you have 3.7 billion people looking at you, you have to move away from football the way it is. It's reality. China and India, 30 per cent of the world's population, are gagging for football content to watch and we want to try to tell them that Manchester City is their content.”
These grandiose plans invite the inevitable question: can City ever become the equal, in global terms, of Manchester United? “We will,” Cook said. “If I didn't have that goal, I wouldn't be here. Can we? Yes. Will we? It might take a bit longer. At Nike you don't sit around saying, 'Can we?' you say, 'We will'. I've got to change that here. I call it the cultural cascade.
“I talk to my employees and I get: 'This is England, not America, you know,' 'This is Manchester, not London, you know,' 'This is Manchester City, not Man United, you know.' We have to change that culture.”
Before they can even think about that, City must change the culture of self-harm that has hindered the club for about four decades. Things seemed to be changing under the previous board until Thaksin came along last summer with his plans for global domination.
Time will tell whether he is the long-awaited saviour of Manchester City or whether the club, with a megalomaniac owner at the wheel, is hurtling towards oblivion in a golf kart.
Blue Moon with stars in its eyes: big names who would fit the bill
Ronaldo (AC Milan and Brazil, aged 31): No longer the force he was but still a marketing man's dream, despite the goofy teeth and the spare tyre around the waist. Manchester City have inquired about him in the past and will no doubt do so again. Cook's associations with Nike, the player's sponsor, could help.
Thierry Henry (Barcelona and France, 31): Another Nike client and another who, as he finds himself on the wrong side of the hill, might return to the Premier League for one final pay day.
Carlos Tévez (Manchester United and Argentina, 24): A long shot, but not quite as outlandish as it might sound. United are not guaranteed to pay the £32million required to buy out his contract from the businessmen, such as Kia Joorabchian, who “own” him. Joorabchian has close links with Thaksin Shinawatra, the City owner.
Ronaldinho (AC Milan and Brazil, 28): A persistent chase may have ended in predictable failure this summer, but at least he now knows there are two clubs in Manchester. A realistic option if things do not work out in Milan.

FROM:TIMESONLINE

Cristiano Ronaldo will be given time to recover

Sir Alex Ferguson, the Manchester United manager, will not rush Cristiano Ronaldo back into action, despite the sight of the Portugal forward jogging at the club’s training ground fuelling reports that he may return to fitness sooner than expected.
Ronaldo has been given the green light to step up his recovery from ankle surgery, but Ferguson is cautious about the prospect of an early reappearance. The manager has suggested that the club’s leading scorer last season will be out until the beginning of October, but the speed of the 23-year-old’s recovery has led to claims that Ronaldo will return sooner.
“If a player is out for a certain period there is no point rushing him,” Ferguson said. “You may as well wait the extra week or two to make sure they don’t suffer any setbacks. Cristiano may get back quicker, but we are not putting him under any pressure.”
FROM:TIMESONLINE

Window Watch: Andrei Arshavin, Roque Santa Cruz, Philippe Senderos, Nikola Zigic

Andrei Arshavin, the Russia playmaker, could finally be on his way to Tottenham Hotspur after Zenit St Petersburg agreed to lower their £20 million asking price. Arshavin, who is keen to move to London, has been left out of the Zenit squad for the match against Krylya Sovetov Samara this weekend.
Zenit need the money to buy players before the transfer window closes on September 1, but are worried that Tottenham have lost interest in the 27-year-old. However, Dick Advocaat, the Zenit coach, seems confident that a deal will go through.
“The transfer period is yet to finish and things can still change,” Advocaat said. “Last year we sold Martin Skrtel to Liverpool for £10 million, and now probably Arshavin will go to Spurs.”
Roque Santa Cruz, the Paraguay striker, has ended speculation about his future by signing a new four-year contract with Blackburn Rovers. The 27-year-old has been the subject of failed bids from Aston Villa and Manchester City this summer. The new deal will tie him to Blackburn until June 2012 and his wages will rise to around £60,000 a week.
Santa Cruz has been a huge hit since arriving at Ewood Park from Bayern Munich for £3.8 million last summer and scored 23 goals in all competitions. The forward is thought to have been keen to repay the faith Blackburn showed by signing him from Bayern, despite his poor injury record, while the arrival of his 18-year-old brother, Julio, at the club was another reason to stay.
West Bromwich Albion have signed Borja Valero, the Spanish midfield player, from Real Mallorca for a club-record fee of £4.7 million.
Shaun Maloney has returned to Celtic from Aston Villa in a deal that could rise to £2.5 million. The midfield player moved in the opposite direction 18 months ago for £1 million.
Decent bets
Everton are in pole position to sign Nikola Zigic, the Serbia forward, from Valencia. Zigic was available only on a permanent transfer but his club are now willing to let him go out on loan.
Daniel Arismendi, the Union Atletico Maracaibo and Venezuela striker, has arrived in England for talks with Wigan Athletic.
Long shots
Philippe Senderos’s father has claimed that Newcastle United and AC Milan are trying to sign the Arsenal defender. “If his dad is right, he’s got two tremendous clubs to choose from,” Kevin Keegan, the Newcastle manager, said. “We need another defender.”
Arsenal are not interested in signing Gareth Barry, according to Martin O’Neill, the Villa manager.
One of Thiago Neves’s representatives has said that Manchester City are to sign the Brazil midfield player from Fluminense. Neves is said to have caught the eye while playing for his country in the Olympic Games.

FROM:TIMES

Luiz Felipe Scolari expects to seal deal for Robinho

Chelsea expect to sign Robinho in a matter of days after the Brazil forward told Real Madrid that he wanted to move to Stamford Bridge. Luiz Felipe Scolari is worried that his team will be too predictable without some Brazilian flair this season and the Chelsea manager has told his employers to do whatever it takes to sign the 24-year-old from the Spanish champions.
Real are holding out for £31.7 million for a player who has failed to live up to expectations at the Bernabéu, but Chelsea believe that they can reach a compromise quickly after Real turned down offers of £19.7 million and £25.4 million. “I dream of playing in the English league,” Robinho said. “Chelsea have a great squad and a great team. My objective is to play there. I've got nothing against Madrid, but I want to resolve this as soon as possible. It's not about money, I simply want to leave.”
Chelsea have offered to double the Brazilian's wages to about £70,000 a week and are confident that they will have signed the two players that Scolari wanted - Deco and Robinho - when he agreed to replace Avram Grant last month. Peter Kenyon, the Chelsea chief executive, met Scolari and Frank Arnesen, the director of scouting and youth development, yesterday to update them on developments after flying back from Madrid.

Robinho has become disillusioned in Spain after Real tried to use him as a makeweight in their attempts to sign Cristiano Ronaldo from Manchester United this summer and after he was refused permission to play for Brazil in the Olympic Games in Beijing.
“I like Robinho because his style is different from what we have,” Scolari said. “We need one player who can make a difference. To change our system we need a different type of player. If we only use one system it will be easy for other teams to beat us.”
Scolari trained with his first-team squad yesterday morning to prepare for tomorrow's match away to Wigan Athletic and the Brazilian made a point of having a quiet word with Frank Lampard after the England midfield player was booed by his own supporters during England's 2-2 draw with the Czech Republic at Wembley on Wednesday. Scolari advised Lampard to try some retail therapy. “I asked Frank if he was upset and he said no,” Scolari said. “I told him that now he had renewed his contract he should go out and spend some money.”
Lampard was happy to stay at Stamford Bridge after the club agreed to give him a five-year contract worth about £140,000 a week, but there are still question marks about the futures of Shaun Wright-Phillips and Andriy Shevchenko. Portsmouth are trying to sign Wright-Phillips on loan and Scolari will not stand in the winger's way if he decides to move to Fratton Park.
“I have 26 players in my squad so to lose one or two would not be a problem,” Scolari said. “I don't know what Shaun thinks about offers from other teams. I have three or four wide players so if we sell one it will not be a problem for me.”
Shevchenko stopped off in Milan on Thursday on his way back from Ukraine's 1-0 victory over Poland in Kiev but his hopes of returning to the San Siro appear to have been dashed temporarily after AC Milan insisted that they would sign him only on loan. “He was having negotiations in Milan on Thursday but he trained on Friday and everything is normal,” Scolari said. “I am happy if he stays because he will be one more option for me.”
Didier Drogba has an outside chance of playing in the home match against Tottenham Hotspur next weekend. The Chelsea forward has been sidelined with a knee injury but Scolari expects him to return to full training this week. “He is getting better and his knee is very well,” Scolari said. “Maybe he will play against Tottenham but whatever happens he will be ready in 15 days.”Steve Bruce, the Wigan Athletic
manager, goes into the match at home to Chelsea tomorrow having suffered humiliation at the hands of one of the London club's players this summer. Bruce, a keen golfer, could not resist a round with Andriy Shevchenko when the pair bumped into one another while holidaying in Barbados.
“I got hammered,” Bruce said. “Shevchenko's partner was the pro at Wentworth, while I was left with Stephen Hunt, from Reading. I have to say, Shevchenko is one hell of a golfer. We were beaten by the 9th hole, but I blame Stephen. He was hopeless.”
Four months ago, Emile Heskey delivered a devastating blow to Chelsea's title hopes with an injury-time equaliser as relegation-threatened Wigan came away from Stamford Bridge with a 1-1 draw. It has been a summer of change at Chelsea, but Bruce believes his former club, Manchester United, will make a successful defence of the title.
“I knew when we came away from Stamford Bridge that we were safe,” Bruce said. “But last season has gone. We've got to go and do it again, and make sure we're ready for the challenge. As for the title race, United are going to be formidable again.”

FROM:TIMESONLINE

Thứ Ba, 19 tháng 8, 2008

John Terry is ready to lead England from the back again

Martin Samuel, Chief Football Correspondent
When England's players arrived at the team headquarters near Watford this week, Fabio Capello gave them a lecture on respect. He said that everybody in football would be watching their behaviour and their attitude towards referees extra closely this season and that it would be hard for him to select those that continued to attract bad headlines. John Terry did not take this as a positive sign in his quest to retain the England captaincy.
The next day, it was announced that Jacqui Smith, the Home Secretary, would be leading a government initiative against teenage knife crime and several England footballers, those perceived as good role models, were required to be the public face of the campaign. Rio Ferdinand, captain of Manchester United's double-winning team in many matches last season, sat next to Smith as she faced the cameras and he later spoke with feeling as a community leader and a longstanding anti-knife campaigner, who had helped to establish the Damilola Taylor Trust after the fatal stabbing of the ten-year-old from Peckham nearly eight years ago. Again, Terry did not see this assured display of statesmanship as of great help to his cause.
Frankly, he had long given up hope of leading out England at Wembley against the Czech Republic tonight. Terry had heard the same rumours as the newspaper journalists, the same insider information that has been circulating in football for the best part of six months. It began with a rumble that certain figures within the FA did not see Terry as captaincy material. Always officially denied, of course, but resurfacing from time to time, nonetheless. Chelsea were fined £30,000 for their protests when John Obi Mikel was sent off in a match away to Manchester United on September 23; later they were charged with failing to control their players away to Derby County on November 24. Terry was captain in both games.
There were other issues, too. One too many lurid Sunday newspaper headline, it was said. Not the sort of thing that reflects well on the English game with all those Fifa dignitaries to impress in time for 2018. Then Terry's £150,000 Bentley turned up in a disabled parking space. Brendan Behan wrote that there was no such thing as bad publicity; but he did not spend much time trying to catch Terry a break towards the end of last season. By March 19, when Chelsea drew 4-4 away to Tottenham Hotspur, the whispers had grown to a roar of banner headlines. The lack of respect shown by Terry and his team-mates for Mike Riley, the referee, was the final straw. The next week, Terry was overlooked by Capello as Ferdinand was handed the captain's armband for a match in France, and whole sermons about standards of behaviour were read into the manager's pidgin English and translated answers.

The brusque manner in which Capello announced Ferdinand's elevation at a team meeting was also said to indicate his displeasure at Terry's conduct, rather than his rudimentary grasp of a foreign tongue, and from there the Ferdinand-for-captain rollercoaster went at speed down the rails. Even when Terry was made captain against the United States in May, and scored, it was perceived as a morale-building sop to get him over the agony of missing what would have been the winning penalty in the Champions League shoot-out. Unlike Ferdinand, he did not travel with the team to play Trinidad & Tobago in June. The lines of communication continued to buzz with predictions of a demotion.
Hear the same sentence enough times and you start to believe it, and Terry will have lost count of the number of times he has heard, or read, that Ferdinand was to be Capello's captain. According to his agent, Aaron Lincoln, he was resigned to listening as the manager read out Ferdinand's name at the team gathering after training yesterday when it was known the decision would be revealed.
He did hear the clipped pronunciation of Ferdinand, but as his understudy, not his replacement. Steven Gerrard was the biggest loser, usurped as vice-captain, Terry the biggest winner, reinstated to the position he held under Steve McClaren. What he won was something that was technically in his possession, but it must still have felt like locating a prized item of jewellery down the back of the sofa having long written it off as lost. And successfully claimed on the insurance.
“I was surprised, actually,” Terry said. “You hear little things and with the form Rio has been in and what Manchester United have achieved I thought he would get it.”
So what swung it? Capello has talked of a captain in the mould of Franco Baresi, his leader at AC Milan, and right down to his central defensive position in the team and his penalty miss at a final of a leading tournament, there are similarities. Capello admired Baresi's ability to command the players under pressure, to stay calm and give instructions, to execute the game plan. This is Terry's forte, too. It is no coincidence that he was missing from the two matches in which England fell apart at the back at crucial moments, in Russia and at home against Croatia.
As for Ferdinand, it has been argued that responsibility has brought the best out of him, that it has made him more focused during matches. Yet is that truly an attribute? Why should it need an armband to get a man's head straight? Surely, awarding the captaincy is not about what the job can do for you, but what affect your appointment has on the team. Yes, Ferdinand may appear the better role model, but where do the moralists draw the line? Ferdinand's behaviour after United played away to Chelsea last season was hardly exemplary and he did miss that drugs test. We all know what you get for that these days: a gold medal.
Captive audience
John Terry's second coming as England captain will be witnessed by the biggest football crowd in Europe this evening. The FA has sold more than 65,000 tickets for the first international of the season at Wembley and with ticket offices open throughout the day it hopes that the attendance could be in excess of 70,000. Tickets remain available priced between £30 and £60.
FROM:TIMESONLINE

Thứ Hai, 18 tháng 8, 2008

Total result matchs

Arsenal - Wesbrom 1 - 0 (Ars: Samir Nasri 4')
Boltol - Stoke 3 - 1 (Bol : Steinsson 34 Davies 41 Elmander 46 - Sto : Fuller 91)
Everton - Blackburn 2 - 3 (Eve:Arteta 46 Yakubu 64 - Bla:Dunn 22 Santa Cruz 66 Ooijer 91)
Hull city - Fulham 2 - 1 (Hul:Geovanni 22 Folan 81 - Ful:Ki-Hyeon 8)
Middlesbrough - Tottenham 2 - 1
(Mid:Wheater 71 Mido 86 - Tot: Huth o.g. 91)
Sunderland - Liverpool 0 - 1
(Liv: Torres 83 )
West Ham - Wigan 2 - 1 (Wes:Ashton 3, 10 - Wig:Zaki 47)
Chelsea - Portsmouth 4 - 0 (Che:J Cole 12 Anelka 26 Lampard (pen) 46 Deco 89)
Villa - ManC 4 - 2 (Ast:Carew 47 Agbonlahor 69 ,74 ,76 Manc:Elano (pen) 64 Corluka 89)
Man Utd - Newcastle 1 - 1 (Mu: Fletcher 24 - New: Martins 22 )

Manchester United frustrated by spirited Newcastle United

  • Let us start at the very end, when the final whistle blew and a delighted Kevin Keegan disappeared into a huddle with his coaching staff while Sir Alex Ferguson wore the look of a man who had just missed the last bus home. The goals and the points had been shared, but the elation of Newcastle United’s supporters was in stark contrast to the mood among the home fans, who may have been wondering what kind of deficit their team will face when they return to Old Trafford in late September.
  • By a quirk of the fixture list, complicated by their participation in the Uefa Super Cup against Zenit St Petersburg on August 29, in Monaco, United do not have another home game in the Barclays Premier League until the visit of Bolton Wanderers on September 27, by which time they will have been to Portsmouth, Liverpool and Chelsea without the injured Cristiano Ronaldo. This was not the game in which they would have expected to drop points in a tough start to the season, but, with Ronaldo sidelined, Carlos Tévez absent because of a family bereavement and Dimitar Berbatov yet to complete his protracted move from Tottenham Hotspur, they lacked the wit and the penetration to break down a surprisingly spirited Newcastle.
  • A draw at Old Trafford on the opening day of the season is not necessarily a portent for a successful campaign, as Reading’s experience last term showed, but, for Keegan, it was worth celebrating. Newcastle were lucky to meet the European champions on an off-day, but, with his team taking an early lead through Obafemi Martins and then reasserting themselves after Darren Fletcher’s equaliser, Keegan was entitled to laud the performance of his side, not least his three new signings, Fabricio Coloccini, Danny Guthrie and Jonas Guttiérez
  • “It was a good performance and I thought we thoroughly deserved a draw,” Keegan said. “You can’t afford to carry anyone when you come here; the attitude has to be spot-on. But I had a really good feeling after watching them train on Saturday. The attitude was spot-on and I’ve told them in the dressing-room that if they can come here and do that, they can go anywhere and do it.”
  • Such statements will have Newcastle’s supporters fantasising about the good times returning to Tyneside and, while they should not get too far ahead of themselves, the performances of their three new players were encouraging. Coloccini, who completed his £10 million move from Deportivo La Coruña on Friday, had an uncomfortable start in the centre of defence, but improved as the afternoon went on; Guthrie, who failed to make the grade at Liverpool, performed with diligence and composure in midfield; and Guttiérez showed that there is more to him than a frankly disturbing obsession with Spider-Man.
    At least four fans in the away end could be seen wearing Spider-Man costumes and, if this display, full of aggressive running, is a sign of things to come from the Argentina winger, fancy-dress shops on Tyneside can expect busy months ahead.
  • Newcastle had the temerity to take the lead on a ground where they lost 6-0 last season, with the incredulity of their supporters perceptible during the briefest of silences that preceded the celebratory roar. Guthrie swung over a corner from the right and, with Fletcher napping, Martins sent a firm header past Edwin van der Sar. Ferguson expressed alarm afterwards that a player of the Nigerian’s height (or rather lack of it) should have scored such a goal.
  • A strange performance from the home team was characterised by Fletcher. He scored United’s equalising goal in the 24th minute, darting ahead of Charles N’Zogbia to poke Ryan Giggs’s cross past Shay Given, and it was just as well he did score given that, as well as being at fault for Newcastle’s goal, the midfield player repeatedly incurred the wrath of Wayne Rooney during the first half.
  • Rooney started the game with great purpose, sending in a delicious cross from which Fraizer Campbell, who impressed on loan to Hull City last season, would have scored a debut goal had his header not caught Given on the forehead. Campbell was among the few positives for United, with the youngster again forcing Given into a more orthodox save in the second half, but it was asking a lot of him to step into the gap left by the absences of Tévez and Ronaldo and the continuing stalemate with Tottenham over Berbatov.
    By the end, having replaced Giggs and Campbell with Rodrigo Possebon and Rafael Da Silva, two Brazilian teenagers, United had two full backs, Da Silva and Patrice Evra, operating on the wings and Rooney ever more isolated in attack. Apart from Vidic heading against the crossbar with 16 minutes remaining, United barely threatened in the second half and it was telling that, as their frustration grew, three United players were booked in the closing stages.
  • Not a great start for the champions, for whom a game of catchup beckons, but, reassuringly, the cavalry, Berbatov included, is on its way.
    Man Utd ratings
    4-4-2 E van der Sar 5 W Brown Y 5 R Ferdinand 7 N Vidic 6 P Evra 6 D Fletcher 5 M Carrick 5 P Scholes 7 R Giggs 6 F Campbell Y 6 W Rooney Y 6
    Substitutes J O’Shea (for Carrick, 25min 5), R Possebon (for Giggs, 63 5), R Da Silva (for Campbell, 80) Not used T Kuszczak, G Neville, J Evans, D Gibson. Next: Portsmouth (a)
    Newcastle ratings
    4-4-1-1 S Given 7 H Beye 6 S Taylor 7 F Coloccini 6 C N’Zogbia 5 J Milner 6 N Butt 6 D Guthrie 7 J Guttiérez 7 D Duff 5 O Martins 7
    Substitutes not used S Harper, J Enrique, S Bassong, D Edgar, Gérémi, A Smith, R Donaldson. Next: Bolton (h)

by:Oliver Kay

FROM:TIMES

Dimitar Berbatov: Please let me follow my dream

  • Dimitar Berbatov urged Tottenham Hotspur last night to show understanding over his “dream” of joining Manchester United, whose need for attacking reinforcements was exposed as they began their defence of the Barclays Premier League title with a 1-1 draw against Newcastle United.
  • With an ankle injury ruling Cristiano Ronaldo out for the first six weeks of the new campaign and Carlos Tévez missing yesterday because of a bereavement, Sir Alex Ferguson was forced to give a debut to Fraizer Campbell alongside Wayne Rooney in attack and, with the latter having missed much of preseason with a virus, the United manager admitted that his team sorely lacked penetration at Old Trafford.
  • Ferguson refused to discuss his interest in Berbatov afterwards, with the clubs still some way apart as they haggle over a fee, but the Bulgaria forward broke his silence on the matter last night, making clear his determination to move to Old Trafford even though he did not refer to United directly. “I’m now in Tottenham, but no one can disagree with me wanting to follow my dream,” he said as he returned to Sofia to prepare for a midweek international friendly against Bosnia-Herzegovina.
    Mischievously, perhaps, Berbatov sought to compare himself to Eric Cantona, the talismanic former United forward, when asked about his sulky disposition on the bench before he came on during Tottenham’s 2-1 defeat away to Middlesbrough on Saturday. “If I had been laughing when I was on the bench, people would say I was an idiot,” he said. “Eric Cantona never smiled, but I don’t know if anyone ever asked him why he didn’t look happier.”
  • On Friday lunchtime Berbatov pleaded with Daniel Levy, the Tottenham chairman, and Damien Comolli, the sporting director, to grant him his wish to be able to join United, but Levy is determined to make United pay £30 million for the forward and will enjoy the thought that Ferguson’s desperation will have grown with yesterday’s result.
  • United have not made an official bid since a £20.5 million offer was rejected last month, but negotiations continue to take place through intermediaries, with the clubs expected to agree a fee in the region of £28 million this week or, at the very latest, before the transfer window closes on September 1. Emil Dantchev, the player’s agent, said: “We have two more weeks until the end of the transfer window and I think this will be the most important week. I read Alex Ferguson’s statement that he wants another striker and I hope that this striker is Dimitar Berbatov.”
  • Ferguson is expected to offload Louis Saha once a deal is agreed for Berbatov, with AS Roma continuing to show an interest in the France forward, and he may yet agree to loan Campbell to Hull City, whom he helped to win promotion last season. Another United player who could yet leave before the transfer window closes is Mikaël Silvestre, who has attracted interest from Celtic and, closer to home, Manchester City. Previously this summer the France defender indicated that he would prefer to stay at Old Trafford for a tenth season, even if his first-team opportunities appear increasingly limited.

BY:Oliver Kay

FROM:TIMES

Thứ Bảy, 16 tháng 8, 2008

Hammers see off Wigan revival

IT MAY seem obvious to say that goals change a game but this match proved it. You wouldn’t have given Wigan a prayer after only 10 minutes, when they were 2-0 down, let alone at half-time when the score was the same and they had mustered scarcely one major attempt on goal.
However, they scored within a couple of minutes after the interval and took it from there. Took the game, that is to say, emphatically to a suddenly diminished and ineffectual West Ham, who were immensely lucky to hold on to a 2-1 lead that seemed more fragile from minute to minute.
It might be argued that, as are so many things in football, it was all in the mind. To dredge up a relevant cliche, having scored, Wigan plainly began to believe, while West Ham mysteriously ran out of steam. They lost a midfield that they had previously dominated and which now featured the power, precision and technique of Honduras international Wilson Palacios. But for all their possession, all the good football they now played, Wigan found it hard to create concrete chances and so it was that West Ham survived.
Yet in those first 10 minutes, they looked irresistible and Wigan looked fragile in defence to a degree. First, Mark Noble found the French right-winger Julien Faubert who crossed from the right. Dean Ashton, in irresistible early form, pivoted dynamically and whipped in a tremendous right-footed shot on the turn. There was nothing Chris Kirkland could have done about it.
In the 10th minute, after a left-wing corner by Faubert, the ball came to Ashton on the far post and it was 2-0. You wondered then, as Wigan looked increasingly laborious, just how many goals would follow.
In the event, there was none at all, though on 14 minutes, a left-wing cross by Faubert was met by Carlton Cole’s strong header, which Kirkland jumped to turn over the bar. Two minutes more, and Cole, at the other end, was actually heading off his own goalline after a Wigan corner; Wigan’s only attempt of any consequence throughout the half.
Ten minutes after that, Kirkland went down low to take a shot from the new West Ham right-back, Valon Behrami, but the score stayed at 2-0.
Just two minutes later into the second half and it was 2-1. The Wigan left-back Maynor Figueroa took one of his long, searching throws from the left, Emile Heskey, otherwise largely anonymous, flicked it on, and Amr Zaki, the Egyptian international, whipped the ball in with his left foot. He should really have got at least one more, notably on 67 minutes, when another long throw by Figuro gave him an excellent chance that he booted over the bar. Palacios, admired both by his own manager Bruce and West Ham’s Alan Curbishley, had Wigan’s second most significant shot of the second half, a fierce right-footed drive that the West Ham keeper Robert Green soared to turn over the top, but that was as near as Wigan came to what would have been a thoroughly well-merited equaliser.
Afterwards, Bruce said: “We have just given them a doing in their own backyard. That’s what disappointed me. You can’t give two goals away. The second one was pathetic. You can’t expect to come here and score three, though we could and should have done.”
He spoke of how, at the instigation of Arsenal manager Arsène Wenger, he signed Palacios for his previous club, Birmingham City, and now he has him profitably at Wigan. He spoke enthusiastically, too, about Zaki: “I thought he could play in the Premiership and you saw it today. He’s took the best chance, his goalscoring record is unbelievable.
“You can see today he had five chances. He needs a little bit more composure. Yes, I know I’ve got a decent team, but as we didn’t defend properly, we came unstuck. We took a long time to recover from the two goals.”
Star man:Wilson Palacios (Wigan)
WEST HAM:Green 7, Behrami 7, Davenport 6, Upson 6, Neill 6, Faubert 7 (Boa Morte 86min), Parker 6 (Mull-ins 72min), Noble 6, Etherington 6, Ashton 7 (Sears 73min), Cole 6
WIGAN: Kirland 7, Melchiot (De Ridder 83min), Scharner (Koumas 83min), Boyce, Figueroa, Valencia, Cattermole 6 (Sibierski 85min). Palacios 8, Kapo, Heskey, Zaki
Referee:S Bennett
Attendance:32,758

FROM:TIMESONLINE

Mido’s touch downs Spurs

Middlesbrough 2 Tottenham 1
ONE of the reasons Middlesbrough were willing to part with Jonathan Woodgate last season, apart from the small matter of £8m, was that they already had a replacement who could fill the gap. When his p r e d e c e s s o r s h o w e d u p yesterday in the colours of Tottenham Hotspur, David Wheater was able to assure his club that their faith in him had been justified.
On a miserable opening day for Spurs, when a late own-goal was the sum total of their efforts, and Dimitar Berbatov’s transfer to Manchester United appeared to move a step closer, the man who took full advantage of their fragile condition was Wheater.
Not only did he score the opening goal, he had another disallowed, and although the big centre-back was filling in at right-back, he did more than enough at the other end to thwart a Tottenham side who lacked an edge in the penalty area.
To make matters worse for a frustrated travelling support, the decisive goal, which came with four minutes left, was plundered by their former striker, Mido. When Gary O’Neil picked out new signing Didier Digard at the corner of the box, the substitute’s low shot across goal was turned in by a player who has bagged more injuries than goals since his move to the Riverside.
It was that kind of day for Tottenham, whose absentees were as interesting as their starting lineup. The presence of Berbatov on the bench seemed to reflect renewed speculation about his future.
His manager, Juande Ramos, denied reports that the Bulgarian had put in a transfer request, and insisted that he still wanted to keep him. “Of course,” he said. “I love great players. For the moment, he is a Spurs player. We are happy with him as part of the squad. There is nothing to say.”
The decision to start him on the bench made no sense. Either he is distracted, and not fit to play at all, or he is committed to Tottenham for 90 minutes, but as it was, he remained hidden until the Londoners’ patience ran out. “We opted for Giovani [Dos Santos] as I thought his speed would trouble Middlesbrough,” said Ramos. “However, as Middlesbrough tired, we decided to throw him on.”
Berbatov’s arrival on the pitch midway through the second half prompted an even mixture of booing and applause from the 4,000 travelling supporters. If this turns out to be his last appearance for a club who are also adjusting to life without Robbie Keane, the acquisition of Andrei Arshavin will become an urgent priority. Zenit St Petersburg are reported to have dropped their asking price for the Russia striker. “I cannot speak about players who are not currently in my squad,” said Ramos, when asked about the forward who came to prominence at Euro 2008.
Although Giovani had a bright game, Darren Bent was quiet, save for a late shot that flashed wide, and Spurs’ best efforts came from distance, usually courtesy of David Bentley’s boot. “It is always difficult when you have quite a few new players. Everyone takes time to settle into a new type of football, ” said Ramos.
Spurs lacked the freshness expected of a team that gave d e b u t s t o L u k a M o d r i c , Heurelho Gomes, Bentley and Giovani. The last two of those combined to create the visitors’ best effort of an otherwise pedestrian first half. The Mexican striker, playing deep behind Bent, danced past two opponents before laying the ball off to Bentley, who stepped inside to rush a hopeful shot wide from just outside the box.
Middlesbrough left Didier Digard and Marvin Emnes on the bench but they were sharper in key areas. When Tuncay dashed on to Wheater’s long ball, and lobbed it over Benoit Assou-Okotto, his pass to Afonso Alves gave the left-back just enough time to recover. With a sliding challenge, the Spurs defender deflected the shot over. Then, when Wheater arrived late in the box to crash a Stewart Downing corner into the net, referee Martin Atkin-son decided that he had pulled down Michael Dawson in the process.
There was a distinct improve-m e n t i n S p u r s a f t e r t h e interval, with crisper, more inventive passing, and another shot from Bentley to declare their intentions. This time, with his back to goal, the £15m signing from Blackburn accepted a pass from deep, needed only one touch to turn and steady himself, before delivering an outswinger that the goal-keeper parried wide.
Berbatov’s arrival briefly compounded Middlesbrough’s problems, most notably when his clever exchange with Jer-maine Jenas allowed the midfielder to test Brad Jones with a low shot, but as long as the home side have Stewart Downing in their midst, they will sustain a threat. With 17 minutes left, the England midfielder swung in a low cross to the front post, where a flick by Alves was tipped on to the bar by Gomes. It was no surprise to find the irrepressible Wheater, an eager handful at both ends, pouncing on to the loose ball and thrashing it over the line.
Middlesbrough announced yesterday that they had signed Justin Hoyte from Arsenal for £3m but it was too soon for him to make his debut, so Wheater played at right-back, and Robert Huth partnered Pogatetz in central defence. The big German had a sound enough game until stoppage time, when he rose to meet Bentley’s cross, but succeeded only in glancing it into the far corner.
It couldn’t take the sheen off a performance that had the Middlesbrough manager, Gareth Southgate, brimming with optimism. “There has been a real good feeling about the club preseason,” he said. “When there is that faith, you want to reward it with a performance and a result, and we did that on both counts.”
Star man:David Wheater (Middlesbrough)
MIDDLESBROUGH:Jones 6, Wheater 8, Huth 7, Pogatetz 6, Taylor 6, Aliadiere 6, O’Neil 7, Shawky 6, Downing 7, Alves 6 (Mido 76), Tuncay 6 (Digard 72)
TOTTENHAM: Gomes 7, Zokora 7, Dawson 6, Woodgate 6, Assou-Ekotto 5 (O’Hara 78), Lennon 6 (Bale 66), Jenas 6, Modric 6, Bentley 7, Bent 6, Giovani 7 (Berbatov 66)

FROM:TIMESONLINE

Caleb Folan’s late strike gives happy Hull the perfect start

Hull City 2 Fulham 1
Well, who’d have believed it. Very few in the KC Stadium after the first quarter of an hour or so, during which Fulham were so dominant it looked as though the Premier League newbies were going to be not so much put in their place as humiliated. Instead, out of nothing, Geovanni’s shot equalised Seol Ki-Hyeon’s early header, and the match took on a totally different aspect.
Seeing Seol outpace Michael Turner onto a long ball in the opening minute must have given the City fans immediate food for thought, but any apprehension they felt would have been quickly forgotten if Mark Schwarzer hadn’t dived to push Geovanni’s third-minute header onto his left-hand post after three minutes. The little Brazilian found himself unmarked when Marlon King headed a long cross back into the middle of the penalty area, and Schwarzer then had to recover quickly to block Ian Ashbee’s attempt to force home the rebound.
If that was encouraging for City, however, the next 15 minutes or so were torture. Phil Brown’s decision to field three players over 30 - Nick Barmby, Ashbee and George Boating - in midfield had looked risky beforehand, and the movement and neat passing of the Fulham quartet of Simon Davies, Jimmy Bullard, Danny Murphy and Zoltan Gera left the Tigers looking decidedly ponderous.
Uncertainty at the heart of the City defence didn’t help matters, and the goal they conceded in the eighth minute was horribly simple. Bullard pinged in a diagonal cross from the right, and Seol, having lost Anthony Gardner, rose to glance a firm header beyond Boaz Myhill.
More joy should have followed in short order for the away team. Ashbee blocked Davies’s close-range shot after Gardner had headed an attempted clearance straight to him, and John Pantsil, a summer signing from West Ham, nearly turned the resulting corner past Myhill.
Davies volleyed another corner just over, and Gera sliced a close-range shot wide with only the goalkeeper to beat, but to general disbelief, it was City who scored next. Geovanni picked up the ball 40 yards from goal, turned, ran forward, and with nobody deigning to put in a challenge, drove a left-footed shot beyond Schwarzer. It might turn out to be the most important goal City score all season.
Having been in danger of being overrun, City suddenly started to compete. Boateng put himself about as of old, and Fulham began to look uncertain, though had Gera not poked wide after Bobby Zamora flicked on Bullard’s cross shortly after half-time, they might have reestablished their early dominance.
Instead it was City who began to get on top. Turner headed a corner just over, and Geovanni, presented with golden chance by Barmby, contrived to volley wide from just six yards. Schwarzer had to save well from Richard Garcia, and with Fulham’s nervousness increasing, Brown introduced a touch more pace to City’s forward play in the form of Caleb Folan and Craig Fagan.
With eight minutes remaining, he had his reward. Fagan, chasing a long ball down the right, harried Paul Konchesky into a mistake, robbing the full-back as he stumbled, and with Schwarzer coming out to narrow the angle, squaring for Folan to sidefoot calmly home.
“There were moments in the first half that weren’t enjoyable, but goals change games and give players’ confidence,” said Brown. “For a period after they scored we were running around chasing shadows, and if they’d have got a second it might have been game over.
“But a little bit of magic from Geovanni got us back into the game, and I thought in the second half we fully deserved what we got.”
Fulham boss Roy Hodgson agreed, up to a point. “All credit to them for their second-half performance. We started brightly, and I hoped we’d play the same sort of football after the break, but they were more aggressive and we didn’t get our central midfielders on the ball.”
He couldn’t resist a dig though, suggesting “the weight of long balls” may have told on his team, and no doubt it won’t be the last this season. City won’t mind, as long as they are picking up points. “There may not be many times this season we’ll go behind and come back to win,” said Brown.
Star man:George Boateng (Hull)
HULL:Myhill 6, Ricketts 6, Turner 7, Gardner 5, Dawson 5, Garcia 6 (Fagan 73min), Boateng 8, Ashbee 7, Barmby 6 (Halmosi 61min), Geovanni 7, King 7 (Folan 69min).
FULHAM:Schwarzer 7, Pantsil 5, Hangeland 6, Hughes 6, Konchesky 5, Davies 6, Murphy 7 (Andreasen 85min), Bullard 7, Gera 6, Zamora 5 (Dempsey 81min), Seol 6 (Nevland 85min).
Referee:P Walton
Attendance:24,525

FROM:TIMESONLINE

Fernando Torres saves Rafa's day

Sunderland 0 Liverpool 1
FOR A long time it seemed the chant of the day would be “There’s only one Keano”. Sung with gleeful pointedness by Sunderland supporters as a disconsolate Robbie Keane was substituted, it was appropriate for a moment at which their manager was holding sway. It appeared Roy Keane would be the author of the game’s story, his summer recruiting having improved Sunderland’s technical levels to the extent they were holding Liverpool not through sweat or fortune, but footballing reasons. Then came a thunderbolt from a golden striker and from away fans a familiar refrain: “Fernando Torres, Liverpool’s Number Nine.”
For a year now Torres saving Liverpool has been a familiar phenomenon. So, too, is what followed after the game. Rafael Benitez came into a press conference and suggested his authority as manager is being compromised by elements above him in his club’s hierarchy but he did so in such obtuse fashion that the nature of his complaint was not entirely clear. He remains angry at not being allowed to sign Gareth Barry and suggested that, even now, the capture of the midfielder, priced at £18m by Aston Villa, might be possible.
“I was in contact with Tom Hicks (Liverpool’s co-owner) and I was told that if we sell one or two players we will have enough money to buy one good player. I have the support of at least one of the owners,” Benitez said. That begged the question whether he is being blocked by George Gillett, Liverpool’s other
owner, but if Benitez has a voodoo doll it is of Rick Parry. The plan to buy Barry and fund the transfer by selling Xabi Alonso is one Benitez cooked up in April. Does he blame Parry for it not being carried out? “The question is that we have to be quicker. I said these things four years ago and I continue thinking the same,” Benitez said.
He denied reports he is considering quitting over Gareth-gate and still hopes Barry can be signed, though it is understood Barry has become so exasperated he is ready to announce he is no longer interested in leaving Villa this season. To
thicken an already gloopy plot, Alonso played a key part in Liverpool escaping with full points. Left out of the starting line-up, he replaced Damien Plessis at half-time and improved his side’s performance before, in the 83rd minute, feeding Torres with a clever pass. Torres was still 30 yards out and with it all to do but Sunderland made the fatal mistake of backing off him. Torres advanced and with unerring accuracy and prodigious power lasered a shot past Craig Gordon. “We were tiring and I take responsibility for that. For all our good work it’s the last 15 minutes that really count,” said Roy Keane. “Torres was the difference, but that’s the Premier League.”
Liverpool so nearly had that familiar feeling of punctured title pretensions with a campaign barely underway. An anti-climactic performance was encapsulated when, at 0-0, after Gordon parried a deflected Dirk Kuyt shot Torres was set to score only for Robbie Keane to get in the way of his partner’s shot. Benitez recalled Sami Hyypia in an attempt to stabilise the back four but Liverpool’s defending remained skittish, their wide play deficient and Steven Gerrard and, until his goal, Torres, were subdued.
Sunderland began far smoother, with all their manager’s new recruits contributing to a composed performance. Most prominent was El Hadji Diouf, and after 12 minutes home fans bellowed “Diooooouf” as the Senegalese, with a double pirouette, left Kuyt and Yossi Benayoun on their backsides and crossed to create a chance for Daryl Murphy, who headed straight at Jose Reina.
Sunderland had pressed as well as they had passed but could not maintain energy levels as the second half progressed. They might have led when Teemu Tainio fed Diouf but the forward, off balance, could not direct a left-footed shot away from Reina.
Benayoun stretched Gordon with a low drive but Pascal Chimbonda blocked Robbie Keane’s attempt to score from the rebound. “When we played Liverpool last season I hoped we’d get a result. I woke up this morning and thought we’d get a result. That’s the difference. I think they’ll get back on the bus and be glad to see the back of us,” was the bittersweet verdict of Roy Keane.
SUNDERLAND: Gordon 6, Chimbonda, Nosworthy 6, Collins 6, Bardsley 6, Malbranque 6 (Edwards 73min), Tainio 7 (Whitehead 57min, 6), Reid 6, Richardson 7, Diouf 8, Murphy 6
LIVERPOOL: Reina 6, Arbeloa 4, Carragher 6, Hyypia 6, Dossena 6, Kuyt 5, Gerrard 5, Plessis 5 (Alonso h-t, 7), Benayoun 5 (Aurelio 81), Keane 6 (El Zhar 77min), Torres 7
FROM:TIMESONLINES

An Ince perfect start for Rovers

AFTER THE remarkable way he transformed Macclesfield and Milton Keynes, his avowed aim of turning Blackburn Rovers into the Harlem Globetrotters of the Premier League looks like being a doddle for Paul Ince. The man who carries a magic wand in his kit bag wore a grin the size of the Mersey after collecting his first three points via a dramatic late winner from Andre Ooijer — the only Dutchman whom one could never describe as of the flying variety.
Blackburn and Ince thoroughly deserved their victory, which silenced claims that some of the players were unhappy with the Guv’nor. “The crap they write in papers,” was how Ince dismissed it and though much has been made of the fact that he is only the third black man to manage a Premier League club, he understands that the only real black and white issues in football appear in the win and loss columns.
Everton manager David Moyes will be disappointed that his team were booed off having spent the summer transfer window shopping rather than diving through it feet first, leaving him so short of personnel that he was forced to give a debut to a raft of youngsters, including 16-year-old Jose Baxter and 17-year-old Jack Rodwell. Moyes said: “I told those boys they should be proud of themselves for making the bench. But it’s hard when you have to send on a 16-year-old to try and win you a Premier League game.”
Ince’s Blackburn are another squad who defy the common belief that every Premier League club is awash with transfer funds. Long gone are the days when Jack Walker spent most of his days signing million pound cheques, with Ince forced to sell goalkeeper Brad Friedel and striker David Bentley and fearing Roque Santa Cruz could be next. He replaced the popular Friedel with axed England goalkeeper Paul Robinson, who on debut conceded he was upset with Everton’s equaliser.
Despite his lack of buying power, Ince has promised to sprinkle a little stardust over Blackburn, who were compared in style to their equally unloved neighbours Bolton Wanderers.
Here they proved they are ready to let some light into their game with David Dunn and Morten Gamst Pedersen their sunniest midfield players. Dunn, who has suffered bad luck with injuries,opened the scoring with a jinking run, a cut inside and a lovely left-foot delivery into the corner of Tim Howard’s net.
Everton, however, are always a force to be reckoned with at Goodison, even when they appear to be playing like drains. Two minutes into first-half stoppage time and with Moyes preparing to deliver his first major rollicking of the season, Mikel Arteta fired the equaliser from a difficult angle just outside the box.
Everton suddenly found that the headwind they had appeared to be playing against in the first half had turned into a tail wind. Yakubu, rising magnificently at the far post, connected with Arteta’s wonderful cross and found the net. Everton who won more home games last season than any side outside the top four, appeared to have pulled another from the fire.
Within two minutes, however Blackburn were level, Joleon Lescott allowing Santa Cruz to get goal side from Stephen Warnock’s long hoof forward which came from last season’s playing manual. So did the cool finish from Santa Cruz, hoping to better his 23 goals of last term.
A match that had started at pre-season friendly pace developed into one of those frantic fencing matches for all three points that makes the Premier League such a riveting competition. Baxter, who only signed professional forms with Everton two weeks ago, almost won it with a header over the top a minute from time. But in stoppage time Ooijer claimed that honour after Nelsen’s header from Warnock’s free kick came back off a post.
EVERTON: Howard 7, Neville 5, Yobo 6, Lescott 5, Valente 6 (Baxter 78min) Arteta 8, Jagielka 6, Baines 6, Rodwell 6, Osman 7, Yakubu 7.
BLACKBURN: Robinson 6, Ooijer 6, Samba 7, Nelsen 6, Warnock 6, Reid 6, Mokoena 6, Dunn 7 (Tugay 90min), Pedersen 7 (Treacy 76min), Santa Cruz 7, Roberts 6 (McCarthy 83min)

FROM:TIMESONLINE

Samir Nasri secures victory for Arsenal

ARSENE Wenger claims Arsenal will win the title if they start this season the way they did last year, when they won six of their first seven games, but they will have to play a lot better than this to finish ahead of Manchester United and Chelsea.
Wenger’s team led the table last Christmas, and he says: “I feel we were well equipped for a challenge last time, and we were very close to doing it. If we can have as good a start as we did last year, then I believe we will win it this time.”
Yet when the curtain went up yesterday, the performance fell flat. West Brom were there for the taking and might have been 4-0 down before their return to the Premier League was 20 minutes old, but the Gunners’ shooting was of the blunderbuss variety, so much so that Emmanuel Adebayor, of double-your-money notoriety, was booed when he missed the target for the umpteenth time late on.
Albion might have been overwhelmed in the first half but they dug deep and put up a creditable showing in the second

For the home crowd, it was a curate’s egg of an afternoon, good and bad in parts. There was much to admire in the midfield intelligence, enterprise and quick feet of Samir Nasri, the £11m summer recruit from Marseilles, whose match-win-ner was the fastest goal on debut by an Arsenal player in Premier League history.
O n t h e d e b i t s i d e , Adebayor and Nicklas Bendtner looked as if they wouldn’t have scored had they still been playing this morning. Wenger took comfort from the fact that it is far too early to be making meaningful judgments, that his team had a tough match against FC Twente in Champions League qualifying last Wednesday, and that improvement is all but inevitable when the new players are fully integrated and Cesc Fabregas is fit again.
West Brom are the only team in the top division without shirt sponsors, and it is not only cynics who would suggest you could safely put yours on them going back down again. That certainly looked to be the way of it when Nasri scored after just three minutes and 42 seconds, sidefooting home Denilson’s cut-back from the byline on the left. Theo Walcott would have made it 2-0 in the sixth minute but for Carl Hoefkens’ headed clearance, William Gallas was desperately close from distance after 10 and Bacary Sagna had a 25-yarder deflected wide in the 18th.
Albion, comfortably the best team in the Championship last season, seemed destined to be so again in 12 months’ time. To their credit, they displayed a collective spirit that should serve them well in what will be a difficult winter, and even threatened to equalise before the interval, when South Korea’s Do-Heon Kim, who was a constructive influence, stretched Manuel Almunia to his fingertips with a menacing shot from 18 yards.
Arsenal remained dominant, with Nasri ploughing a productive furrow on the left. He replicates the distributive excellence of Fabregas, who is expected to be absent for another fortnight with hamstring trouble, but Wenger, more than any of his peers, will tell you that you can’t have too many good footballers.
Adebayor was twice off target with near-identical shots and he was not the only one. Walcott’s passing was hit and miss and Bendtner’s touch on one occasion bordered on the elephantine.
Wenger admitted that when it remained 1-0 deep into the second half he feared the worst. “I almost felt we deserved to be punished”, he said. They nearly were. Almunia saved with his legs from Ishmael Miller and Paul Robinson, following in, would have scored but for Johan Djourou’s goalline clearance.
Arsenal sent on Robin Van Persie and he threatened to score twice in the last 10 minutes, but West Brom defended well. Their manager, Tony Mowbray, said: “I don’t take any solace from losing 1-0, but I thought we were competitive. We’ve earned the right to be in the Premier League and we’ve got to make sure we stay here. The transfer window has two weeks to go, we’ll add some strength and be a better unit for it. I hope to bring in another four players.”
Wenger said: “We’ve only just started the season and no, I’m not worried we weren’t sharp enough to finish them off. We expected them to crumble but they never did.”
Of Arsenal’s title prospects, he added: “We got 83 points last time, which would win you the league anywhere else in the world, and we believe we can do better. We finished only four points behind Man United and should have won a trophy for the most unlucky team because of the bad injuries we had.” ARSENAL:Almunia 6, Sagna 6, Nasri 8, Gallas 7, Walcott 6 (Toure 72min), Denilson 6, Djourou 7, Clichy 6, Adebayor 5, Bendtner 6 (Van Persie 69min), Eboue 6 WEST BROM:Carson 6, Hoefkens 6, Robinson 7, Cech 5 (MacDonald 67min) , Barnett 6, Greening 7, Miller 5 (Bednar 73min), Brunt 5 (Beattie 80min), Do-Heon 7, Meite 6, Morrison 6

FROM:TIMES

Thứ Sáu, 15 tháng 8, 2008

Gabriel Agbonlahor signs new Aston Villa deal

Gabriel Agbonlahor has committed his future to Aston Villa by agreeing a new long-term contract at the club.
The England Under-21 forward has signed a new four-year deal which will keep him at Villa Park until June 2012.
Agbonlahor, 21, has followed the decision of John Carew, who signed until 2011 yesterday, by putting pen to paper on a new deal.

FROM:TIMES

Wayne Rooney in contention but Dimitar Berbatov deal still on ice

Manchester United are facing up to frustration in their attempt to beat today's deadline to sign Dimitar Berbatov in time for the player to make his debut against Newcastle United on Sunday, but Wayne Rooney has informed Sir Alex Ferguson that he is fit and available for selection, having made an encouraging recovery from the mystery virus that laid him low after their pre-season trip to Nigeria.
Rooney contracted the virus while in Abuja, where United played a lucrative exhibition match against Portsmouth on July 27, and was unable to train for ten days on the squad's return to Manchester. Ferguson suggested that Rooney had little chance of being fit for the start of the new Barclays Premier League season, but the word from United's Carrington training ground is that the forward has trained fully this week and undertaken additional sessions every afternoon to build up his fitness.
As is his way, Rooney has been pleading with Ferguson to select him against Newcastle at Old Trafford, but the United manager will consult his medical staff before making a final decision. Rooney is firmly expected to be named in the 18-man squad, with Cristiano Ronaldo and Louis Saha injured, but he must wait to learn whether he will join Carlos Tévez in the starting line-up or be named among the substitutes.
United had hoped to sign Berbatov from Tottenham Hotspur this week, with a view to playing him against Newcastle if necessary, but Premier League rules stipulate that all the relevant paperwork must be processed and filed to the league's headquarters by noon on Friday for a transferred player to be eligible to represent his new club that weekend. In cases such as this, where international clearance from the Bulgarian FA would be required, that deadline can be extended to 5pm at the league's discretion.
As it is, the paperwork stage remains some way off, with United still to break Tottenham's resistance over a transfer fee and Barcelona lurking in the background.
Tottenham, who were irked this week by premature reports that a deal had been struck, were eager to make clear that they have not received a formal bid for Berbatov since rejecting United's opening £20.5 million offer last month, but negotiations are continuing through intermediaries, including Emil Dantchev, the player's agent. Daniel Levy, the Tottenham chairman, wants £32 million for Berbatov, but United expect to complete a deal for approximately £28 million sooner rather than later.
Berbatov trained with his Tottenham team-mates yesterday and Juande Ramos, the head coach, has refused to rule out the forward playing away to Middlesbrough tomorrow. “I will wait until the final training session and see how he is,” Ramos said. “He's an excellent professional and he has been getting on with things in training.”
Privately, Ramos is resigned to losing Berbatov, but publicly he sounded a different note. “Dimitar is a great player and is carrying himself superbly through this and we want him to stay,” Ramos said yesterday. “I have no preference one way or another. You have to go with what is happening.”
With Robbie Keane having joined Liverpool for £20.3 million, Berbatov's departure would leave Darren Bent as the only senior centre forward at White Hart Lane, but Ramos said: “It is nothing to panic about. We work without rest to look for players and we have always known the deadline day is August 31. We are working calmly in the background on one or two things. We prefer to work with as much discretion as we can.”
Edwin van der Sar, the United goalkeeper, has followed Ryan Giggs by indicating that this season could be his last as a player. The goalkeeper, who will face competition this season from Ben Foster and Tomasz Kuszczak, will wait until December, by which time he will be 38, to decide whether to retire when his contract expires next June.

FROM:TIMES