Arsenal Transfer News: Winston Reid Wants January Move, Latest Gunners Rumours

Arsene Wenger knows he needs a centre-back this month. Now, the Arsenal manager knows at least one prospective target is open to a move to the Emirates Stadium.

West Ham United’s rugged central defender, Winston Reid, has apparently decided on Arsenal as his so-called “dream move.” That’s according to Daily Mirror reporter Darren Lewis.

He believes the 26-year-old New Zealand international was dropped by Hammers boss Sam Allardyce due to the distraction caused by the ongoing transfer speculation. Reid won’t sign a new deal with the east London club and wants the Hammers to thrash out an agreement with the Gunners.

“West Ham are insistent that they want around £8 million for the centre-back should Arsenal come in for him this month,” Lewis wrote. “The Gunners had hoped to land Reid for around £4-5 million. Reid fears he will be priced out of a move.”

There’s plenty to recommend Wenger pursuing Reid. The 26-year-old is combative, pacy and good in the air. Arsenal’s first-choice pairing, Laurent Koscielny and Per Mertesacker, don’t necessarily combine all of those attributes.

Wenger has needed cover behind this experienced duo all season. Raw youngster Calum Chambers has chafed under the burden of filling in since signing from Southampton last summer.

By contrast, Reid is a battle-worn player well-versed in the frenetic, physical environment of England’s Premier League. He would require no adaptation period. That marks him out compared to another prospective target, Mats Hummels.

The classy Borussia Dortmund stopper has been on the Gunners radar for a while. However, it seems that Arsenal and other interested clubs, including Premier League rivals Manchester United, will have to wait.

The Germany international told Die Welt (h/t Daily Mail reporter Thomas Jacobs) that he wants to stay in Dortmund, at least for the time being: “Would I play in Dortmund without the Champions League? I do not think qualification for the Champions League will be the only requirement to be happy.”

B/R analyst Sam Tighe broke down Hummels’ attributes and what he’d bring to potential suitors:

As a ball-playing centre-back, Hummels has all the qualities to suit Wenger’s possession-based game. He would also offer the aerial prowess the Arsenal defence has lacked at times this season.

But it seems Wenger will have to wait until at least the summer to make any potential deal happen. That rates as another minor blow in what is becoming a far-flung search for defensive help.

Wenger is also reportedly targeting Villarreal’s Gabriel Paulista. However, B/R La Liga expert Guillem Balague has suggested the Brazilian will command a steep fee:

One decision that may be easier for Wenger involves the immediate future of striker Joel Campbell. The youthful Costa Rica international remains a loan target for Real Sociedad and ex-Everton and Manchester United gaffer David Moyes.

The Gunners are reportedly prepared to give Moyes an answer within 24 hours, per Daily Mirror writer John Cross. He lists Valencia, Inter Milan and Benfica as fellow interested parties but also states Wenger’s preference for Campbell is to move to a Premier League club to gain some experience.

The Arsenal chief has already sent Yaya Sanogo on loan to Crystal Palace. Learning the ropes in England’s top flight seems like the next logical step in Campbell’s development.

Despite also having Lukas Podolski on loan at Inter, the Gunners could afford to send another striker out. Wenger can count on attacking talisman Alexis Sanchez to lead the line. He also has natural centre-forward Olivier Giroud to call on along with wide forwards Theo Walcott and Danny Welbeck.

Attack is the one area Arsenal are certainly well-stocked.

Yet the story is not as simple at the back. Wenger must recruit a quality centre-back in the January transfer window. It may mean casting a wide net, as West Ham continue to dig their heels in over Reid.

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Liverpool Transfer News: Lucas Leiva Wants Inter Move, Latest on January Rumours

Lucas Leiva is reportedly ready to leave Liverpool amid rumours Inter Milan are interested in a transfer despite Reds manager Brendan Rodgers insisting the Brazilian isn’t going anywhere.

According to ESPN FC’s Richard Jolly, the midfielder has been linked with a move to the Nerazzurri, and Leiva is open to starting a new challenge:

Lucas Leiva wants to leave Liverpool and is intrigued by the prospect of a move to Inter Milan, sources have told ESPN FC. Liverpool manager Brendan Rodgers has ruled out letting the midfielder go in this transfer window, but ESPN FC has been told the Brazilian is willing to move and that he feels undervalued at Anfield.

[…]

Lucas considered going last summer, when Rodgers would have allowed him to leave, and his recent return to favour has not been enough to persuade him that his long-term future lies at Anfield.

As reported by Jolly, Rodgers recently told reporters he has absolutely no intention of letting the experienced midfielder walk.

“No, he is not one that we would want to lose in January. It is not something I would be willing to do in January,” Rodgers said. “Of course at the end of the season everything is looked at again, but the team is in a good momentum.”

Leiva has returned to the Reds’ starting XI in the 2014-15 campaign with a series of impressive displays, and with the 28-year-old Brazilian in the squad, Liverpool’s results have taken a turn for the better as well.

As shared by Squawka Football, the star midfielder has clearly had quite the impact:

Leiva brings composure to a young squad that sorely needs it, and with veteran playmaker Steven Gerrard set to leave the club at the end of the season, the Reds can ill afford to lose another longtime contributor.

His passing range has been on full display in recent weeks, leading the entire Premier League in completed passes on Matchday 22, per Squawka:

Inter are struggling in Serie A but have already made a big splash in the January transfer window, bringing in Swiss international Xherdan Shaqiri. The Nerazzurri have a talented squad and would present an interesting project for Leiva, who would be an immediate starter alongside Croatia international Mateo Kovacic.

If Leiva is desperate to leave, a January transfer might not be an option. Amid plenty of speculation, Rodgers told talkSPORT’s Alan Brazil he has no intention of concluding any major transfer business, a promise he would have to break in order to find Leiva‘s replacement:

It will be quiet. I’ve said before we wouldn’t be doing much over the course of January.

There are players who are linked with Liverpool all the time. That may be agents looking to get their player a move. For us, it will be pretty quiet.

Liverpool brought in a number of players during the summer window, focusing on youngsters with potential over proven contributors. Those new players required time to adapt to their new surroundings, and untimely injuries set the squad further back.

The Reds’ recent results have been much improved, however, and it’s only logical Rodgers wants to reap the rewards in the second half of the campaign. That means as little turnover as possible, including parting with vital contributors.

Anfield HQ believes Leiva certainly falls under that category:

If the Liverpool boss believes in his current crop of players—and it certainly seems he does—fans can expect him to stay true to his word and not make any major splashes in January.

A lack of new arrivals would surely hinder Leiva‘s chances of obtaining a move away from the club, and if the Brazilian truly wants to leave, he’ll likely have to wait until summer. Given the club’s recent upturn, that would give the Reds plenty of time to change the midfielder’s mind.

 

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Why Lavezzi Is the PSG Player Who Would Most Benefit from a January Transfer

Back on the bench for the first time this year, Ezequiel Lavezzi made his return to the Paris Saint-Germain team for the last 10 minutes of the 4-2 win over Evian Thonon Gaillard on Sunday. It was no more than a fleeting appearance, barely touching the ball and lacking the time to make any sort of impact.

It could be something the Argentine winger has to get accustomed to this season, unless he leaves the French capital before the end of the transfer window.

Last season, Lavezzi was regularly the third member of PSG’s attack, playing on the left, beside Edinson Cavani and Zlatan Ibrahimovic. But his late return from the World Cup in Brazil has caused him to lose his starting place, and then the attitude issues have begun to surface.

For Coach Laurent Blanc, the apparent straw that broke the camel’s back came during the winter break.

Lavezzi’s failure to arrive at PSG’s Marrakech training camp, followed by the weakest of excuses, led to his exclusion from the first team and has all but left him on the outskirts of the team.

Blanc has already declared he is looking for a left-sided attacker this January, making it clear to the Argentine that he is now surplus to requirements at the Parc des Princes.

There have been links with moves to both Liverpool, per The Telegraph, and Inter Milan, via La Gazetta dello Sport (h/t Eurosport France); both would benefit greatly by acquiring a player of Lavezzi’s ability. It was only last May that the 29-year-old started in a World Cup final.

However, it would be Lavezzi himself that would have most to gain from leaving Ligue 1 this month. One last big move could see him regain first-team football, still with plenty to offer a top European side.

Despite only starting eight league games, Lavezzi is still PSG’s fourth top goalscorer with two goals. That’s the same as countryman Javier Pastore, although he has started 10 more games in Ligue 1.

Last campaign, Lavezzi scored nine times in the league and added two important goals in the Champions League, one of which was the opening goal against Chelsea at the Parc des Princes.

What Lavezzi brings is a drive and a determination to make things happen in the final third. His ability to pick out teammates with pinpoint crosses may be lacking at times, but he asks questions of defenders and his runs open space for others to exploit.

The nine goals he managed last season were as many as he scored in his final season at Napoli, and there is nothing to suggest he couldn’t match that figure again.

Lavezzi still has the pace to get in behind defences, his driving style would suit both the high-octane action of the Premier League and in Serie A, where width is at times at a premium.

Quite often, South American players like to return to their homeland in the twilight of their career, or they like to talk about it. Before his 30th birthday, Lavezzi has a chance to make one last move in Europe and show PSG that he was still good enough to be part of their lineup.

Perhaps, it is his lack of versatility that has marginalised his position in the PSG attack. Lucas Moura can play on either flank and is adept at playing behind the strikers, or even as one of them. Lavezzi likes his role on the left, using his left foot to devastating effect when he is on form.

The biggest problem that Lavezzi will face this month is finding a club willing to take on his reported €100,000-a-week salary, per TSM Plug. Once you are earning a premium PSG income, players will find it hard for clubs on a smaller budget to offer them an escape route.

Lavezzi will have the way up the financial benefits of staying in Paris without regular first-team football, compared to the more rewarding advantages of playing regular football.

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Breaking Down Pep Guardiola’s Greatest Managerial Achievements

“I am satisfied that we have done it,” Pep Guardiola told Sky, via Goal. His team, Bayern Munich, had just clinched the Bundesliga title with a 3-1 victory over Hertha Berlin.

On March 25.

With seven games still to go—a league record

Guardiola, to that point, had answered the lingering question at Bayern, the one succinctly outlined by Sky Sports‘ Adam Bate: “What do you buy the girl who has everything?”

Indeed, the task had been a daunting one, taking over from Jupp Heynckes who had steered the Bavarian club to an emphatic treble the season prior. Guardiola’s task in 2013-14—and beyond—was to make them, somehow, better.

Some will tell you he did. Others will argue he didn’t. But in the league, at least, his team’s record—or, more precisely, the records broken—tell their own story: fastest ever team to a Bundesliga title (27 matches), most consecutive wins (19), longest ever unbeaten streak (53), most consecutive away wins (10), longest unbeaten run to start a Bundesliga season (28), longest run of two-goal performances in winning matches (19) and most away goals in a season (46). 

Guardiola’s opinion? “They have got even better,” he declared without hesitation. 

In his first season at the club, the Catalan had taken his iconic, Latin style to Germany, implemented it, despite doubts, to force through a phase of rapid evolution at Bayern and lifted the league trophy in a more dominant fashion than any other in history. 

This season, on current pace, could produce more of the same. 

Of course, there will always be those connected to the club who are unsure of Guardiola, uneasy with his presence at the helm—a group who grew in number after the 4-0 loss to Real Madrid in the Champions League semi-final. But that’s also part of who he is; he can be a figure who polarises opinion. It was the same at Barcelona, where his ascension to first-team coach in 2008 was initially viewed cynically. 

And at Bayern, much like he was in Catalonia, Guardiola is a perfect fit for the German powerhouse. 

“Since my arrival I have tried to care for the heritage of the club,” he said after capturing the 2013 Club World Cup. Things such as heritage, tradition and identity are extremely important to the 43-year-old—winning football games is his job; upholding values is a duty. At Barcelona, he became a standard-bearer, a sort of moral compass, for both a football club and a region in need of positive and influential figures. 

It’s why, according to Guillem Balague in Pep Guardiola: Another Way of Winning, the former Barcelona manager chose to pursue Bayern despite offers from clubs in England and Italy. The club has a grand history, a defined structure and way of doing things, a strong connection with its members and a focus on homegrown talent. 

Like his beloved Barcelona, Bayern, in his eyes, stands for something. Embracing that and building upon it was the appeal. Just as it had been in Spain. 

In his first year in charge at the Camp Nou, he propelled Barcelona, with a method that would become world-renowned and admired, to the most historic of campaigns with the unprecedented capture of six titles. Adapting that method to his work in his first season at the Allianz Arena led Bayern Munich to the capture of four. 

For any other manager, such a haul would have constituted an overwhelming success. For Guardiola, it was considered by some as underachievement. 

That’s how high he’s set the bar. 

 


 

“Give me the B team,” Guardiola said, according to Balague. 

“What!? You must be crazy,” was the response of Txiki Begiristain, the club’s director of football who’d wanted to place the former player into a coordinator-style role, an overseer of all things at the academy level, upon his return to Catalonia. 

But Guardiola didn’t budge. He wanted to coach, not administrate. The B team was a perfect start—a team that, like the first team at the time, was struggling through a malaise and had just been relegated into the fourth tier of Spanish football from the Segunda Division B. 

Though some thought he was mad, he was unveiled as B-team coach in the summer of 2007. He had one personal goal: to earn promotion. 

As Bayern Munich have witnessed, and Barcelona before them, Guardiola’s approach to management is fanatical; obsessive almost. His attention to detail on the training pitch is staggering, he studies opponents for days, he monitors himself what players eat, his tactical brain never stops, he conjures footballing answers to every question before creating more questions and his passion to coach—to actually teach—might be unrivalled. 

He took that approach with the B team. In the Spanish fourth division. 

Instilling a ferocious work ethic in the club’s youth players and altering the academy’s structure, Guardiola rejuvenated La Masia. 

By the end of the 2007-08 season, and with the help of two players groomed by him named Pedro and Sergio Busquets, Guardiola’s B team secured promotion. 

 


 

If Frank Rijkaard’s Barcelona became known for complacency, a loss of standards and the wasting of talent, Guardiola’s Barcelona, aside from dominance and staggering excellence, became known for the polar opposite of such labels. 

Describe his Barcelona and—once you get away from the beauty of the goalscoring and the sheer number of the trophiesyou automatically begin to speak of his team’s intense pressing, their perpetual motion, the positional awareness, the defence through attack, the players’ tenacity and the squad’s durability.

Typically, such a process takes time.

Not for Guardiola, though.

In the space of 12 months, the Catalan took the Blaugrana from decadence to dominance. He transformed a club that was 18 points off the pace of champions Real Madrid in 2007-08 and without a trophy in two years to the most talked-about sporting institution on the planet. 

After little more than one year in charge, Guardiola’s record read: one Champions League title, one La Liga title, one Copa del Rey title, one UEFA Super Cup title, one Spanish Super Cup title and one Club World Cup title. 

Those who view him as a manager of great sides rather than a great manager should take note: He inherited a dysfunctional group of underachievers and turned them into the greatest force the sport has known. 

The key ingredient? The same obsessiveness and attention to detail that saw him win promotion with the B team—themes that were set when he first addressed Barcelona’s stars at St Andrews in Scotland in 2008.

According to Guillem Balague in the Telegraph, Guardiola’s first message mesmerised the group (you can find all of it here):

I’ve been part of this club for many years and I am aware of the mistakes that have been made in the past, I will defend you to the death but I can also say that I will be very demanding of you all: just like I will be with myself.

I only ask this of you. I won’t tell you off if you misplace a pass, or miss a header that costs us a goal, as long as I know you are giving 100 per cent. I could forgive you any mistake, but I won’t forgive you if you don’t give your heart and soul to Barcelona.

I’m not asking results of you, just performance. I won’t accept people speculating about performance, if it’s half-hearted or people aren’t giving their all.

This is Barca, gentlemen, this is what is asked of us and this is what I will ask of you.

Naturally, the distracted Ronaldinho didn’t fit into his vision. Nor did Deco. Samuel Eto’o, who has since spoken of his dissatisfaction with Guardiola, lasted just a season before he was discarded, too. 

The manager carried forward the essence of Johan Cruyff’s tenure, but added to it a work ethic and fanaticism that set Barcelona apart. His players would eat together sitting in an enforced seating plan that varied. They would only speak Catalan or Castilian. Staff with a long-running passion for the club were brought in. Their training ground was moved away from the Camp Nou to the Ciutat Esportiva Joan Gamper to reduce the feeling of stardom within the group.

Every decision was made to boost professionalism and the squad’s collective strength. That itself benefited immeasurably from Guardiola’s unrelenting and unmatched passion to teach, his carefully constructed winning strategies and the devising of a style, an ethos, based on percentages, efficiency and effectiveness.

The result was six titles in a calendar year.  

Not bad, for a club that claimed one point in its opening two league games under its prodigal son. 

 


 

In the history of Barcelona, the 2008 Olympic Games stand as a critical juncture in the club’s fortunes. Perhaps the most significant juncture of all. 

Guardiola, having just replaced Rijkaard, was confronted at the time with a displeased Lionel Messi, who, initially, had been denied the opportunity to represent Argentina at the global event in Beijing by his club. 

The new manager, despite having impressed his players immediately, knew tension with his finest talent must be avoided. For modern football, like many sports, hinges on star power. And though yet to hit his peak in 2008, the club was well aware Messi was one of those. A star above them all. 

As such, it represented an opportunity for Guardiola. In a dispute between the club and its biggest star, the manager had the chance to side with the player and win the affection and trust of the Argentinian. 

He took it. 

“It’s the best decision as, although with Leo we’re a better side, these are exceptional circumstances,” Guardiola announced at a press conference in August 2008 to explain Messi’s involvement in the Olympic Games. 

Begiristain, who, according to Balague in Pep Guardiola: Another Way of Winning, had been persuaded by Guardiola to allow the Argentinian to compete in the games, added: “We want the player to be happy and his happiness is there for all to see.”

Guardiola, instantly, had won over a player who would become one of the greatest individuals the sport has ever seen. 

“I’m very grateful to Pep Guardiola,” Messi later said after winning the gold medal. “I want to reach to him and give him a hug because he understood where I was coming from and it was such a nice gesture.”

It wasn’t the first moment of significance for Barcelona that season. 

In the lead-up to the Blaugrana’s meeting with Real Madrid in La Liga in May 2009, Guardiola was sitting in his office contemplating ways to expose weaknesses in the defending champions: Where are the gaps? Where are the deficiencies? Where can Real be attacked?

In his book, Pep Confidential: Inside Guardiola’s First Season at Bayern Munich, Spanish journalist Marti Perarnau, while reflecting, provides insight into how the then-Barcelona boss propelled a star into a legend with one tactical switch: 

Having watched a previous match between the two teams, Pep noticed how much pressure Real’s midfielders Guti, Fernando Gago and Royston Drenthe put on his own players, Xavi and Yaya Touré. He also noticed the tendency of the central defenders, Cannavaro and Metzelder, to hang back near Iker Casillas’ goalmouth. This left a vast expanse of space between them and the Madrid midfielders.

It was 10pm and Pep was alone in his office. Everyone else, including his assistants, had gone home. He sat in that dimly lit room imagining Messi moving freely across that enormous empty space in the Bernabéu. He saw him face-to-face with Metzelder and Cannavaro, the two players frozen on the edge of the box, unsure whether or not to chase the Argentine. The image was crystal clear and he picked up the phone and dialled Messi’s number.

According to Perarnau, Guardiola called Messi into his office late that night and explained to him his plan and how it would transpire. Messi agreed. 

The next day, with Messi instructed to play as a false No. 9, the Argentinian scored twice. Barcelona defeated Real Madrid 6-2 at the Santiago Bernabeu.

Eighteen months later, with Messi deployed in exactly the same manner, the Blaugrana went better again: Barcelona 5-0 Real Madrid. 

Of course, Guardiola hadn’t conceptualised the false No. 9; he’d just positioned one of the greatest talents of all time in such a manner.

The results were devastating.  

 


 

“They are the best team we have ever played,” Manchester United manager Sir Alex Ferguson said.

Two years earlier in 2009, the Scot believed his team had thrown away the opportunity to claim consecutive Champions League titles, but, on this occasion, he was left in no doubt as to where the trophy deserved to be.

“We were beaten by the best team in Europe,” Ferguson declared. 

The occasion, of course, was the 2011 Champions League final between Barcelona and Manchester United at Wembley—a repeat of the 2009 final in Rome.

Barcelona, under Guardiola, had already claimed three straight La Liga titles, but Jose Mourinho’s Inter Milan had stopped their European charge in 2010. The 2011 final of the continental competition was the chance to reassert their dominance in Europe. 

Goals to Messi, Pedro and David Villa did just that. The match ended 3-1 to Barcelona, the Spanish club starting seven players, and eventually fielding eight, who had progressed through La Masia—the revered youth setup rejuvenated by Guardiola.

Again, Barcelona had not only been recognised as Europe’s finest, but also as an example of a certain type of footballing purity. They’d triumphed their own way, Guardiola’s way. 

As his players celebrated, Guardiola, according to Balague, turned to his assistant Manel Estiarte and said remorsefully: “I will never forgive myself. I have failed.” 

He’d just won the Champions League for the second time in three seasons. In doing so, he’d just captured his 10th major title in that time. 

But Guardiola, the perfectionist, the obsessive manager with an unrivalled work ethic, thought he could have done better. 

That’s who Bayern Munich have now. 

 

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Inter – Celtic Glasgow (Uefa Europa League) – Richiesta biglietti

Ciao, è aperta la possibilità di richiedere biglietti per la partita di Uefa Europa Leage INTER – Celtic Glasgow di giovedì 26 febbraio ore 19.00. Le richieste possono essere inoltrate (1 biglietto per socio) via mail a: icsolointerpv@gmail.com

Una volta ricevuta conferma della disponibilità del biglietto vi saranno inviate le istruzioni per provvedere al pagamento.

Il termine ultimo per richiedere i biglietti scade inderogabilmente venerdì 6 febbraio!

Sempre forza Inter!

inter celtic glasgow tickets

Ronaldo Contemplating Return to Football with NASL Club

The original Ronaldo—the Brazilian one—could be set for a surprise return to playing action after the 38-year-old admitted he wants to turn out for NASL’s Fort Lauderdale Strikers, the club at which he recently became a part-owner.    

The two-time World Cup winner and Brazilian legend bought a minority stake in the Strikers—from America’s second tier—back in December, per Hamish Mackay in the Daily Mail, and he is now eager to lace up his boots once again, per Sports Illustrated‘s Grant Wahl.   

“I will try to play some games. This year I want to train a lot,” Ronaldo said. “The last three years I didn’t because I was too busy in other stuff. Maybe if we get to the final and I’m feeling good, why not? I will put my name in the NASL as an option.”

Ronaldo was widely regarded as one of the world’s best players in his pomp as he netted bags of goals playing for Barcelona, Inter Milan and Real Madrid. 

However, he struggled with his fitness towards the end of his career and eventually hung up his boots in 2011, finishing his playing days at Brazilian club Corinthians. 

It is unclear whether Ronaldo will actually go through with his stated desire to play in the NASL, although the prospect is likely to be hotly anticipated by many, including football writer Avi Creditor:

However, there is also little doubt that the move would draw criticism from many as it may be perceived as disrespectful for Ronaldo to decide he can simply put himself into the Fort Lauderdale Strikers’ side whenever he feels so inclined, per ESPN FC’s Jason Davis:

Whatever happens, there is no doubting Ronaldo’s legendary status in the world game and the fact he would certainly bring huge publicity to NASL with a return to action.

He would also potentially prove doubters wrong if he does indeed turn out to play once more.

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