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Archive for Luglio, 2011

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An interesting aside to Remi Garde’s appointment as coach of Olympique Lyonnais was in the detail of his presentation. At 45, Garde doesn’t have the UEFA Pro Licence and so was actually appointed as ‘technical director’, with long-term goalkeeping coach and now assistant coach Joel Bats – who does have the pro licence – acting as the name above the door. Lyon’s travails of the last three years mean a little loophole location to satisfy the rules counts not even as a minor inconvenience.

Club president Jean-Michel Aulas will need no reminder that precise definition of title is important, especially where the man in the hot seat is concerned. Garde’s appointment is more than just a vote for the former Arsenal man as a safe pair of hands: security and stability is sought in returning to the hierarchical structure that propelled Lyon to seven successive titles in the first decade of the century.

When Garde’s predecessor, Claude Puel, was appointed amid much fanfare, the aim was to remove the one perceived weakness in the management model, giving the team itself a real leader, with real power. Aulas’s decision to give Puel the title – and responsibility – of ‘general manager’ was an unmitigated disaster. The cost to Aulas financially, and in loss of silverware and personal reputation, was painfully steep.

Puel and the club are heading for court in order to settle up for the 12 months that were yet to run on his four-year deal when he left Lyon last month, with the erstwhile boss claiming €5 million in wages and potential bonuses. Yet even the worst-case scenario in front of the judges could hardly make the summation of Lyon’s fortunes under Puel more chastening.

Over the last two seasons of the former Lille manager’s tenure, Lyon spent a mind-boggling €110 million on players, making a total of €155 million since his 2008 arrival. With no trophies won and a style of football which infuriated the Gerland supporters, the only factor stopping Puel being fired more quickly was the further exorbitant expense that would be occurred. Unsurprisingly, the club’s trading losses of €35 million for the financial year ending in June 2010 were the biggest in Ligue 1.

The summer 2009 signing of Michel Bastos was the clearest indicator of how much power within the club had shifted. Lille demanded €18 million for Bastos. Club legend Bernard Lacombe, previously omnipotent adviser to Aulas, baulked at the price but Puel insisted, and Aulas went ahead and paid the money to clinch the deal.

So why was Puel given such free reign? One answer is the dissatisfaction with the management of Puel’s own predecessor, Alain Perrin, with the perception being that an experienced squad was running amok under a coach without sufficient status, though the former Troyes and Portsmouth boss led Lyon to the league and cup double in his one and only season. Sidney Govou’s recent revelation that the senior players had a half-time discussion without Perrin during the 2008 Coupe de France final against Paris Saint-Germain to change from his tactical plan only reinforced this view.

Now Aulas has realised that less is more. Garde is an unobtrusive if determined character, who knows the club inside out having played at the Gerland between 1987 and 1993, before later returning as Gerard Houllier’s assistant for two seasons between 2005 and 2007. Even more significantly, Garde was the club’s academy director last season, and recognises the value of the highly-promising likes of France Under-19 forward Alexandre Lacazette and Clement Grenier, given little opportunity under Puel. It echoes a subject that Lacombe and Houllier previously crossed swords on, when the former expressed his belief that the ex-Liverpool boss was stymieing the development of Karim Benzema by signing the likes of John Carew and Milan Baros.

The break with the previous era has already been marked. Garde pointedly thanked Lacombe and Aulas specifically for “putting their confidence in me” at his presentation, underlining his ability to recognise the established order at the club. The coach has pinpointed the need to raise spirits as a first priority, and recently recalled the atmosphere among the Lyon side with which he was promoted to Ligue 1 in 1989 as a reference. “We were all mates together, and had total confidence in the coaching structure. At the very top level, you can have quality but at any given moment, if you can’t rely on a friend, it’s very difficult.”

The change has clearly met with the approval of the dressing room, with Miralem Pjanic describing Garde’s arrival as “a breath of fresh air”, while former captain Cris – who endured an awful relationship with Puel – was even more blunt: “If he (Puel) had stayed, I would have asked to leave.” Possibly Puel’s biggest mistake during his time in charge was his refusal to discuss tactics with senior players used to being asked their opinions. “(Garde) communicates with us a lot,” Cris says, “and it creates a reciprocal confidence.”

Nobody is suggesting that Garde’s task will be a simple one, which he acknowledges in saying “there’s no miracle recipe”. Even the ever-bullish Aulas recently admitted that Lyon “have no right to talk about the title” after the failures of the last three years, and it is clear sales are necessary to balance the books following the mammon of recent years, with Jeremy Toulalan already having joined Malaga for €11 million and Michel Bastos looking likely to head to Juventus.

Garde will look to rebuild around another big Puel signing, the so-far-underwhelming Yoann Gourcuff. The possibility that Gourcuff will have to undergo an operation to remove a piece of floating bone from his ankle – which would seriously compromise the playmaker’s participation in the crucial Champions League qualifying play-off in August – is a worry, but a minor one given the misery that the €22 million man lived through in Puel’s system. Puel was a coach whose views on football, Gourcuff admitted last season, “are very different to mine.” A quick look at the last three Ligue 1 winners – Bordeaux, Marseille and Lille – shows that stability counts in France. For once, Lyon will leave the spending to PSG this summer as they seek to recover.

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Liverpool managing director Ian Ayre has become the latest figure to question Manchester City’s record £400 million sponsorship deal with Etihad Airlines.

The contract includes naming rights for Eastlands, a major input into a yet-to-be-built training facility close to the stadium and an extension of their shirt sponsorship.

As Etihad are an airline based in Abu Dhabi, home of Blues owner Sheikh Mansour, concerns have been aired that the deal has been artificially inflated to help City achieve UEFA’s demand to live within their means as part of their financial fair play initiative.

Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger earlier this week claimed the deal “raises the real question about the credibility of Financial Fair Play”, and Ayre has now added his voice to the chorus of disapproval.

Quoted by the Independent on the club’s pre-season tour of Asia, he said: “Is Etihad, Manchester City and Sheikh Mansour a related party? If they are, then it’s up to UEFA to rule on them.

“When I spoke at Soccerex earlier this year, I was on a panel about financial fair play. The guys from UEFA who are managing it said there would be a robust and proper process about related-party transactions.”

Of the stadium name change, he added: “It hasn’t happened anywhere in Europe where a football club has renamed its existing stadium and it’s had real value.

“It was called the City of Manchester Stadium or Eastlands for the last nine years and now it’s going to be called something else – and someone has attached a huge amount of value to that.

“I find that odd because there is no benchmark in football that says you can rename your stadium and generate that amount of value. Mike Ashley tried it at Newcastle [sportsdirect.com@St James’ Park]. But nobody calls it that and it doesn’t have that kind of value.”

City on Tuesday night issued a statement branding Wenger’s comments “unfounded and regrettable”.

The statement added: “Manchester City is a pro-active member of the European Clubs Association and is working actively and with transparency with regard to financial fair play.”

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Stewart Downing expressed his delight after completing his move to Liverpool from Aston Villa for an undisclosed fee late on Friday night.

Downing, 26, becomes Kenny Dalglish’s fourth summer signing following the transfers of Jordan Henderson from Sunderland, Blackpool’s Charlie Adam and the acquisition of Roma goalkeeper Alexander Doni.

Downing, who moved to Villa Park for around £10 million two years ago, had been a prime summer target of Reds manager Dalglish, who saw bids of £12 million and £15 million rejected before an agreement for a fee in the region of £20 million was struck.

Downing made it clear only last month, when on England duty, that he would not sign an extension with Villa, effectively forcing them to listen to offers.

Arsenal were reported last weekend to have joined the competition for his signature but Liverpool were always the front-runners, according to the player himself.

“It’s a great feeling and I’m very happy to be here. It’s been a long time coming and I’ve had to wait a few weeks, but I’m really pleased to be here,” he told the club’s official website.

“With the tradition, the manager and the players they have here, there was a big temptation to come here and once I knew of their interest, there was only one place I wanted to go.

“It will be a great feeling to run out at Anfield. It’s always nice to come and play here. The atmosphere is always great and the fans are brilliant. When I wanted to come to Liverpool, it was the first thing I thought of – playing at Anfield in front of those great fans. I’m really looking forward to it.”

Downing’s arrival marked the end of a busy day for Liverpool, who also completed the signing of Doni. The 31-year-old Brazilian is thought to have joined on a free transfer after agreeing personal terms and passing a medical.

Liverpool director of football Damien Comolli said: “We are delighted to sign Doni. It’s a position we felt we had to strengthen because it will allow our young goalkeepers to go on loan and get some experience at some point during the season, which is crucial in their development.”

Doni, who has 10 caps for his country, will provide back-up and competition for Liverpool number one Jose Reina – a role he also played at Roma behind Julio Sergio.

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Wayne Rooney is intent on “creating more history” for Manchester United.

Already a game into a five-match pre-season tour of the United States and put through their paces in a rigorous series of training sessions at Seattle Seahawks’ training base, the Red Devils are looking forward again.

And despite the satisfaction of a medal collection that extends to four league titles, a Champions League and a succession of other trophies, that is exactly how Rooney feels it should be.

“You need to look forward rather than look back,” he told ESPN. “It is something this club breeds into you. The feeling you get from winning trophies is incredible. But we are expected to win trophies. We need to try to create more history for the club.”

Rooney has no worries that will be achieved. Indeed, the England striker is adamant glory will continue to be a staple diet at Old Trafford as long as Sir Alex Ferguson remains in charge.

Ferguson celebrates his 25th anniversary as United boss later this year. Rooney can detect no lessening of his desire as the years go by.

“While he is here, we’ll always be in the hunt to win trophies,” he said, insisting that 3-1 defeat against Barca at Wembley in May should not trigger an inferiority complex.

“Obviously, they were a lot better than us on the day. But over the last four years, we have been to three finals. We are not that far away. If we just give it an extra five percent and try to improve that much, then I think we’ll be all right.”

Fellow striker Michael Owen certainly thinks so, dismissing at a stroke any notion that his burgeoning racing empire – which brought him a Royal Ascot victory in the summer – may be dampening his own quest for honours.

“That [horse racing] will never be my career,” said Owen, who signed a new one-year contract this summer. “It’s just a big passion of mine. It will always be there in the background, but football is my main passion and everyone knows that.

“I’d like to think that if I stop playing in three, four or five years’ time, whatever it may be, that I’ll still be involved in football and still have that as my profession. It’s my passion and what I know.”

Meanwhile, it is being suggested Darren Fletcher’s ongoing struggle for fitness is worse than initially suggested.

The Scotland midfielder was not named in United’s tour party, with club officials claiming Fletcher needed to do more conditioning work to recover from a virus that wrecked his chances of playing any meaningful role in United’s run-in.

However, there have now been claims Fletcher has been told to stay away from United’s Carrington training ground for fear the virus which triggered substantial weight-loss has struck again.

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Newcastle have condemned the “shameful” behaviour of supporters who invaded the pitch during the team’s 2-0 pre-season friendly win at Darlington, with three fans arrested and another escorted from the ground.

Newcastle say they will take “the strongest possible action” against fans responsible for causing a 10-minute delay in the match as celebrations of Sammy Ameobi’s 55th-minute goal turned ugly.

The match looked in danger of being called off as scenes turned violent at the Darlington Arena and, although calm was eventually restored, the guilty parties can expect repercussions.

A statement from the club’s managing director Derek Llambias read: “On behalf of everyone at Newcastle United FC, we wholly condemn the behaviour of a number of our supporters who invaded the pitch during the second half of the club’s friendly against Darlington this evening (July 15).

“The club will be seeking to obtain footage of the disorder from Darlington FC and the police and will be taking the strongest possible action against those individuals responsible for the shameful behaviour.

“This behaviour is not typical of the vast majority of our fans, however this incident gives a poor impression of Newcastle United and its loyal supporters.”

Hatem Ben Arfa made his first appearance since his horror leg break at Manchester City last October as Newcastle boss Alan Pardew named a strong line-up for the team’s first pre-season game.

Captain Joey Barton, who will miss the tour of North America after being denied a visa, opened the scoring in the third minute when he knocked home a cross from Leon Best before substitute Ameobi drilled home a fine shot 10 minutes into the second half.

Durham Police confirmed three visiting Newcastle fans were arrested for “pitch incursion” and another was escorted from the ground.

Manager Alan Pardew reportedly intervened to try to calm fans down and appeal for them to clear the pitch.

Some of the 9,000-plus crowd thought the match had been abandoned but the referee managed to restart the game after the playing surface was cleared.

Police could not confirm reports of an isolated outbreak of fighting between fans during the match.

A force spokeswoman said: “There has been a crowd of more than 9,700, which is significantly more than expected based on ticket sales. Everything was peaceful until Newcastle scored their second goal and a pitch incursion occurred which was high spirited but not violent.

“A further pitch incursion of around 20 to 30 people followed – a Newcastle supporter being escorted from the ground and three Newcastle supporters were arrested for pitch incursion.

“The game ended without incident and crowds have subsequently dispersed.”

She said the three people remained in custody.

Pardew was disappointed the trouble marred a decent display by his side. He said: “Having reflected overnight on yesterday’s match at Darlington that was interrupted in the second half by the actions of some of our supporters, I am left bitterly disappointed by the events that unfolded after Sammy Ameobi scored our second goal.

“Apart from the frustrating disruption to what was a very good game of football and an important part of our pre-season preparation, the pitch invasion was totally unacceptable and has brought shame on everyone connected with Newcastle United.

“We came to play a football match and to provide entertainment for a family audience – instead we witnessed some truly appalling behaviour which damages the reputation of this great club and the vast majority of our true and law-abiding supporters.

“As (managing director) Derek Llambias said yesterday evening, the club will now be taking the strongest possible action against those individuals responsible and that can’t happen soon enough. I speak for everyone at Newcastle United when I say I never wish to see those scenes at a football match again.”

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