Monday, 11 August 2014

Ibrahimovic: I never said I want to return to Juventus

Ibrahimovic: I never said I want to return to Juventus
Stefan Hansson claimed that the striker told him that he was keen on rejoining the Bianconeri before he retires - but the 32-year-old says that the pair have never even met
Paris Saint-Germain star Zlatan Ibrahimovic has dismissed the suggestion that he wants to return toJuventus.

Italian publication Tuttosport recently published an interview with Swedish coach Stefan Hansson, who claimed to have befriended the striker at Malmo and suggested that the 32-year-old wants to rejoin the Serie A champions, whom he played for between 2004 and 2006.

However, Ibrahimovic has now claimed that not only is he uninterested in going back to Juve, he does not even know Hansson.

"A person named Stefan Hansson has been making comments about me," the Sweden international said via his personal app Zlatan Unplugged.

"I would like to clarify that I do not know this person. I have never met him, he has never been my coach and we have never talked on Skype. 

"Normally, I would not even comment on matter like this, but his comments have reached unreasonable proportions, so I felt compelled to react."

Ibrahimovic, who netted twice in PSG's 2-2 Ligue 1 draw against Reims at the weekend, has a contract with the Ligue 1 champions until June 2016.

From Maradona to Medel - what caused Serie A to lose its financial power?


Perennial champions | Big-spending AC Milan led Italy's era of dominance in the 1980s and 90s

ANALYSIS: The world's greatest talent is currently bypassing the Italian peninsula, but where did it all go wrong for a one-time powerhouse in the transfer market?
By Kris Voakes | International Football Correspondent
Once upon a time, the Italian league was the undisputed pinnacle of football. The best players in the world played in Serie A, its clubs repeatedly featured in major European finals and TV sets across the globe would be tuned in every Sunday to watch the peninsula’s best go to battle in front of packed stadiums.
To the younger generation it may seem like a fairy tale as improbable as Goldilocks or Cinderella, but 20 years ago it was a reality. Serie A had no peers. It was simply the best.
Between 1989 and 1998, nine of the 10 Champions League and European Cup finals involved Italian teams, with four winners in that time. Of the seven Uefa Cup finals from 1989 to 1995, six were won by Italian teams, and a total of 14 Serie A representatives featured in the final between 1989 and 1999.
Players as legendary as Diego Maradona, Roberto Baggio, Zinedine Zidane, Marco van Basten, George Weah and Lothar Matthaus were household names across the world and all made their corn in Italy. They were heady times indeed.
Yet in 2014, Italian football is at a low ebb.
No longer is it home to the world’s greatest talents – most of them are in Spain. It doesn’t have the huge audience share in terms of TV – that goes to England. The fans no longer fill the stadiums – instead they’re in various bars across the country with TV rights to football matches in other leading nations. And it lags behind England, Spain and Germany when it comes to achievements on the continent, with the resulting drop in Champions League places in 2012 looking unlikely to be reversed for some time.
The difference between then and now is stark, and has been further underlined by this summer’s transfer window activity.
Many of the league’s biggest remaining talents have been chased long and hard by foreign clubs, with noises from each camp suggesting Serie A is not where they want to be. Arturo Vidal, Paul Pogba and Mario Balotelli have all flirted with other clubs in some way, shape or form, and none of those outfits are on the peninsula.
Simply put, Italy looks like the last place the game’s biggest players want to be right now. And it is not as though the nation’s clubs have the financial muscle to lure top stars to replace their lost talent.
Footballing power often mirrors the chequebook, and Italy’s fortunes in recent years highlight that. Between 1952 and 1992, the world transfer record was broken 17 times, with 15 of those occurrences seeing a Serie A side pay out the unprecedented sum. Players such as Luis Suarez, Omar Sivori, Paolo Rossi, Maradona, Ruud Gullit, Baggio and Jean-Pierre Papin were snapped up in that period, while Ronaldo, Christian Vieri and Hernan Crespo would later follow suit.
More than anything, that was a reflection of Serie A’s power in the moneymaking business of football as Alex Thorpe, a consultant in Deloitte’s Sports Business Group, tells Goal.
“In 1989-90, Serie A was the highest money-generating league, with the Football League in second,” Thorpe explains. “If you fast-forward to today, the Premier League is way out in front with Serie A far behind so it has shifted significantly.
“If we go back to 1996-97, England had €685m worth of revenue with Italy in second with €551m, so the gap wasn’t that big. But if we look now the gap is the best part of €1.3bn.
BIG MONEY | World transfer record from 1952 to 1992
YEARPLAYERFROMTOFEE
1952Hans JeppsonAtalantaNapoli€78,000
1954Juan SchiaffinoPenarolMilan€108,000
1957Omar SivoriRiver PlateJuventus€139,500
1961Luis SuarezBarcelonaInter€228,000
1963Angelo SormaniMantovaRoma€375,000
1967Harald NielsenBolognaInter€450,000
1968Pietro AnastasiVareseJuventus€750,000
1973Johan CruyffAjaxBarcelona€1.381m
1975Giuseppe SavoldiBolognaNapoli€1.8m
1976Paolo RossiVicenzaJuventus€2.625m
1982Diego MaradonaBoca JuniorsBarcelona€4.5m
1984Diego MaradonaBarcelonaNapoli€7.5m
1987Ruud GullitPSVMilan€9m
1990Roberto BaggioFiorentinaJuventus€12m
1992Jean-Pierre PapinMarseilleMilan€15m
1992Gianluca VialliSampdoriaJuventus€18m
1992Gianluigi LentiniTorinoMilan€19.5m
* Cost in euros estimated from exact figure in lire
“But, in fairness, that is true of the Premier League relative to the rest because the gap between the Premier League and even the second biggest league, the Bundesliga, is still over €900m and next season it will be even bigger.
“So the comparison between Serie A and the Premier League probably isn’t the best one but it’s fair to say that Serie A isn’t the stand-out European league as it was 20 years ago.”
Much of the wealth built up around the Italian league of the 1990s simply couldn’t be sustained. The Cirio group that was a majority shareholder in Lazio defaulted on its loans, while Parma’s backers Parmalat collapsed soon after and Fiorentina went into administration due to huge debts they couldn’t repay. When Napoli were declared bankrupt in 2004, Serie A had lost a lot of its depth to poor management of finances.
In the modern day, the bank balances around the bel paese do not cater for extravagances of the level of a Maradona or a Papin. And while matchday revenues continue to climb in the rest of Europe, only 11 per cent of Italy’s credit in 2012-13 came from gate receipts. This is the catalyst for a vicious circle, says Thorpe.
“If you have a full stadium and it’s commercially attractive to partner with you, then there are more eyeballs in the stadium to see the sponsor on your shirt, and there’s a better quality of facilities for brands to be associated with," Thorpe adds. "You only have to look at what’s happened in the UK to see how a good stadium can attract commercial partners.
“Similarly from a broadcast perspective, if there are more people in the stadium and a better atmosphere it makes a better broadcast product and generally you’ve got better facilities being showcased on television.”
To an extent, clubs have had their hands tied behind their backs, with the much sought-after Legge Stadi – which would allow planning applications for football stadiums to pass through law much more swiftly – having come across countless roadblocks on its way to parliament.
 MATCHDAY REVENUES
(2012-13)
€127.3mManchester United
€119mReal Madrid
€117.6mBarcelona
€108.3mArsenal
€87.1mBayern Munich
€82.5mChelsea
€59.6mBorussia Dortmund
€53.2mParis Saint-Germain
€52.1mLiverpool
€46.9mTottenham Hotspur
€46.2mManchester City
€43.2mHamburg
€42.5mSchalke
€38mJuventus
8Source: Deloitte Football Money League 2014 
As things stand, only Juventus and Sassuolo of the 20 Serie A clubs own their own stadium, while Udinese have begun work on theirs and Roma are looking to develop a new arena by 2016. Outside of those clubs there has been very little success in getting any kind of plans off the ground.
There are areas in which the Lega Serie A could have helped itself though. The decision to add a 12:30 lunchtime kick-off to the calendar each week was aimed at the generation of increased audience share in the Asian evening TV slots. Yet big-hitting names such as Inter, Juventus and Milan are rarely asked to play so early, meaning the concept is largely meaningless as an exercise with lower-billed teams unable to attract large broadcast interest.
Italy has not fared well as a country in recent times either, with the nation’s economy being hit hard since the recession of 2008. This has meant a general drop in gates as purse-strings are tightened, plus an unwillingness from would-be benefactors to invest in something so frivolous as football.
Add in Uefa’s Financial Fair Play laws, and gone are the days of Silvio Berlusconi financing Milan’s rise from also-rans to seven-time European champions in lieu of balanced books on the football side itself. No longer can an Angelo or Massimo Moratti decide to throw his wealth at the Inter cause. And the Agnelli family cannot unthinkingly spend Fiat’s fortune on Juventus.
Football needs more than just money these days. It requires patience and care too.
The result is that where once Serie A was welcoming Maradona in front of 60,000 fans, it is now attracting more modest targets such as Gary Medel instead. Inter’s new midfielder represents one of the Italian summer’s biggest signings at €13 million, while wage bills have dropped markedly in the last half-decade, meaning big names of the level of Zlatan Ibrahimovic, Samuel Eto’o, Wesley Sneijder et al are no longer viable additions.
But Thorpe says there are reasons to believe this could soon change.
“There are some green shoots, definitely. There seems to be a realisation now and a momentum about improving stadiums. Juventus’ new stadium has trebled their matchday revenue and clubs have been drawn towards Juve on that.
“There is also the foreign investment coming in, with Inter and Roma recently coming under foreign ownership. And if you look at what Roma are talking about with their stadium complex plans, that – if it comes to fruition – will be a significant milestone, I think. Similarly, you’ve got the Milan clubs making noises about a stadium development and you’ve got Udinese having started renovations.
“I would say that doom and gloom was the right way to look at it two years ago, but now I’d say that there are elements falling into place for some positive change happening pretty soon.”
Clearly, there is hope for the future. The sooner more clubs follow the trend of building for brighter things, the better. It is high time Italian football started attracting football’s Maradonas again.

Drogba doubtful for Chelsea opener limping out of Ferencvaros friendly

The returning Blues striker, back at Stamford Bridge for a second spell, landed awkwardly after challenging for a header during the pre-season game in Budapest on Sunday
Didier Drogba lasted just half an hour of Chelsea's pre-season friendly clash against Ferencvaros before being forced to withdraw through injury.

The Ivorian frontman, returning for a second spell at Stamford Bridge, landed awkwardly after contesting a header and was unable to run off what appeared to be a twisted ankle.

Drogba attempted to shake off the injury but, after coming back on following treatment from the club's medical staff, was forced to withdraw and now hopes that he might recover in time to take on the newly promoted team.

"I twisted my ankle and I couldn't continue," he told the club's official website.

"In the next few days we are going to do some treatment and I hope everything will be better."


Drogba Blues | The Cote d'Ivoire star was visibly in pain after his fall

Drogba was replaced by Oscar and hobbled straight down the tunnel to receive further treatment and his possible absence would be a huge blow for Jose Mourinho, with only Fernando Torres available as cover to Diego Costa.

The Ivorian started alongside Torres in the friendly in Budapest as the Blues continue their pre-season preparations. The 36-year-old hit one shot on target, which was comfortably saved, before limping out.

Chelsea face Real Sociedad in a final friendly ahead of the new season on Tuesday before taking on Burnley on August 18

Sunday, 10 August 2014

Wenger & big-spending Arsenal finally competing with Manchester City's millions

The Gunners, who have splashed out on deals for the likes of Alexis Sanchez and Mesut Ozil in the last year, are reaping the rewards of their manager's shrewd spending
COMMENT
By Richard Jolly

Frank Lampard was very much an integral part of the Chelsea team when Arsene Wenger coined one of his most famous phrases to describe events at Stamford Bridge. “Financial doping,” he called it. As far back as 2009, he argued Manchester City were guilty of the same sin, of distorting sport with bottomless pits of money.

This week, without using the same phrase, he wondered publicly if City were attempting the same crime using underhand methods and Lampard. The Arsenal manager questioned the loan deal that took the 36-year-old to the Etihad Stadium, asking who is paying his wages – City say they are – and whether it is fair that they can use their global family of clubs to bolster their squad. “If you look at a map, the shortest way from Chelsea to Manchester City is not to fly to New York first,” he added, mischievously if accurately, on Thursday.
  
SERIOUS BUSINESS
COMMUNITY SHIELD PREVIEW
ARSENAL V MAN CITY: THEN & NOW
EUROPE OR BUST FOR MAN CITY?
LAMPARD DEAL FINE - PELLEGRINI
WENGER RUES SAGNA SNUB
It is unlikely to endear Wenger to anyone at City. The chances are that he doesn’t mind. These are enemies who are interlinked. The Frenchman’s disciples often end up at the Etihad Stadium, the consequence of a complicated relationship where players venture north and money travels south.

And money is the constant in any discussion involving the FA Cup winner Wenger and the Premier League champions. As a rivalry is renewed in the Community Shield, it is with an old ally on the other side. Bacary Sagna won one trophy in seven seasons as an Arsenal player. He could equal that total in one game in City colours.

Sagna is the first player to swap the Emirates for the Etihad Stadium on a free transfer. He has done so with a hefty pay rise - Wenger has been left counting the cost. Having lost a right-back without receiving a fee, he has spent €35 million on two others, Mathieu Debuchy and Calum Chambers.

Normally, however, Wenger is in the black. Among other things, he is the best businessman to manage in the Premier League. He banked €89m from City for the sale of four players. Despite his misgivings about the source of their wealth, it doesn’t make him a hypocrite. Instead, he is simply a savvy seller. Gael Clichy and Samir Nasri only had a year left on their Arsenal contracts when he accepted City’s offers. Emmanuel Adebayor and Kolo Toure, who cost a combined €50m, were overpriced and Arsenal had seen the best of them. The Togolese striker’s City career never recovered after he stamped on Robin van Persie in his first reunion with his former club.

Such deals helped Wenger live within his means. It remains one of the great feats of Premier League management that he financed the building of a new stadium while finishing in the top four every season. It is tempting to wonder how much more silverware he would have secured but for the emergence of ambitious clubs with very different business models.

Wenger’s reign divides into two halves, before and after billionaires funded title challenges elsewhere. Since his Invincibles were displaced as champions by Jose Mourinho’s first Chelsea team, Arsenal have not won the league.

They went nine years without any honour until the drought was ended by a prime example of 'Wengernomics'. Aaron Ramsey was recruited as a teenager. He was worth many times his €6.25m fee even before his FA Cup final winner against Hull. He is not an example of buying success, but of bringing in and developing potential.

But the difference between Wenger and City, saver and spenders, is not as clear-cut as it once was. No English club paid more last summer than City. No player cost more than Mesut Ozil, the €50m arrival who obliterated Arsenal’s transfer record.

This year, City are restricted to a €61m net spend after failing Uefa’s Financial Fair Play test. They have a free transfer (Sagna) and a loan (Lampard) among their newcomers. In contrast, Arsenal have been more extravagant. Wenger’s outlay for the summer is a club record €82.5m and could get bigger. He has already signed a superstar, Alexis Sanchez. Go back a few years and the Etihad Stadium was a likelier destination for players of the Chilean’s calibre. Arsenal didn’t buy the finished article then.

They can afford to now. Wenger isn’t spending his owners’ millions, but funds Arsenal have generated through gate receipts, prize money, television revenue, merchandising and commercial and sponsorship deals. But City are adamant that, after years of artificial injections of finances, that they will balance the books. Chairman Khaldoon Al Mubarak believes they will break even this year.

As Arsenal are back in contention for major honours and City are becoming more fiscally responsible, they have growing similarities. But they have taken radically different routes and it isn’t just Wenger who believes his is the purer path.

Damaged goods: Why Falcao would be a gamble for Real Marid

COMMENT: The Colombia international is still being linked with Los Blancos - but is he worth the risk in light of the serious knee injury he sustained earlier this year?
By Robin Bairner

The rumours persist. Radamel Falcao is wanted by a string of elite clubs, according to the press, who have linked the Monaco forward with Manchester City, Liverpool and, in particular, Real Madrid. Yet if the Colombia star was to make a summer move, it would represent a huge gamble for the buying club.

In January, the 28-year-old suffered an injury that dramatically altered the course of his career. His knee ligaments were seriously damaged during a Coupe de France match against Chasselay, leaving the striker to fight a hopeless battle to be fit for the World Cup – the event that should have been his crowning glory.

His move to Monaco was meant to be a pit stop before a switch back to Madrid, a necessary stepping stone to allow him to transition to the Bernabeu without breaking an agreement made to former employers Atletico Madrid. After his knee problems, it seems that he may well be marooned on the rocky principality on France’s Mediterranean Coast.

For Monaco, an asset of the notoriety of Falcao cannot be lightly parted with. After James Rodriguez’s move to Madrid, they need the Colombia striker both for his quality and for the prestige that he brings their project.

Player Stats — Radamel Falcao García

The magnitude of James’ move to the Spanish capital is another telling factor. It is estimated that the playmaker’s transfer, which was a deal that the Monegasques did not want to make, was valued at €80 million – going a long way to ensure that Financial Fair Play (FFP) regulations will be met by the Stade Louis II side, who have cutback dramatically on their spending this summer.

And while there is no obligation for Monaco to sell, there is little likelihood of Falcao departing for a knockdown price. He was bought for €60 million and surely cannot be sold at this stage for anything less than that figure.

A year ago, Falcao guaranteed goals, and while he made his mark by scoring on his return to action against Arsenal in the Emirates Cup, there are questions hanging over his ability to remain prolific for the first time since he established himself as a starter at River Plate. 

His time in Monaco last term was, by his illustrious standards, rather modest. It had been expected that he would decimate Ligue 1 defences, but prior to his injury he was enduring his worst season since moving to Europe. True, he still found the net at a rate of more than a goal every other game, but he did not look like the Falcao who so terrorised La Liga with Atleti mere months earlier.


Same as he ever was? | Doubts remain over the lasting effect of Falcao's knee injury
And then came the injury, which was of the variety perhaps most serious to any professional football. Of course, some, such as Alan Shearer, have successfully overcome such problems to remain fearsome until late in their careers, but there are others who have been forced to endure lengthy battles with such a problem.

Ronaldo, for example, managed only seven minutes of football between serious knee problems, restricting him to only 17 outings between November 1999 and mid-2000. Thereafter, he may have regained the World Player of the Year award in 2002, but he was never quite the player so devastating in the pre-injury phase of his career.

It would be a tremendous gamble for a club to take to stake €60m or more on Falcao enjoying such a spectacular comeback, particularly off the back of a relatively mediocre campaign. Madrid have already tied Karim Benzema to a new contract, indicating their priorities lie in stability. 

Starting on Sunday, when Monaco open the season against Lorient at Stade Louis II, the onus is now on the striker to prove that the last six months have been a simple blip in an otherwise formidable career.  If he can comeback strongly, perhaps Madrid or Manchester awaits next summer.

We don't yet have a Di Maria' - Van Gaal talks up Manchester United target

'We don't yet have a Di Maria' - Van Gaal talks up Manchester United target
The Argentina international has been heavily linked with a summer switch to Old Trafford and the Dutchman has intimated that a bid could be imminent
Manchester United boss Louis van Gaal has hinted that the club could launch a bid for Real Madrid wingerAngel Di Maria.

Antonio Valencia, Ashley Young and Nani are the only recognised senior wide playes at the Dutchman's disposal leading into the 2014-15 campaign, and the trio have yet to fully prove themselves at Old Trafford.

Di Maria - who is reportedly surplus to requirements at Madrid following James Rodriguez's arrival from Monaco - appeared destined for Paris-Saint Germain, only for the French champions to end negotiations after being priced out of a deal.

The collapse of Argentine's proposed move to Parc des Princes has opened the door for United, and Van Gaal has dropped a major hint that the club could launch a bid for Die Maria due to a lack of depth out wide.

"At this moment, we have five No. nines and four No. 10s – and we don't have wingers to give us attacking width," the former Netherlands coach told reporters.

"Or, I should say, we don't have wingers of the highest level, like Ronaldo or Di Maria or somebody like that.

"So, I have to play in another way – and you have seen that already. I only buy when I think we need to buy – in the position that is necessary."

Left-back Luke Shaw and central midfielder Ander Herrera have already arrived at Old Trafford but Van Gaal is still eyeing reinforcements.

Netherlands international and Ajax defender Daley Blind is reportedly on Van Gaal's list of targets as he attempts to bolster his defence and the 63-year-old insists he would have no problem recruiting Dutch players.

 "If they are at the level I want them to be, then I will sign Dutch players," he said. "Nationality isn't something that concerns me.

"But Dutch players are usually cheaper than players of other nationalities and they have usually been very well educated in the Netherlands, I believe.

"But they have to be of a level than can play well in the English Premier League. You have to ask if that is the case with every player."

Alexis Sanchez is an animal' - Gibbs

'Alexis Sanchez is an animal' - Gibbs
The full-back admits that taking on the winger each day is proving a hellish task, but is relishing playing alongside the Chilean and is backing him to add firepower up top
Alexis Sanchez has been "an animal in training" since joining Arsenal from Barcelona, according to Kieran Gibbs.

Sanchez is set to make his competitive debut in Sunday's Community Shield clash with Manchester City, after reportedly arriving from Catalunya last month for an initial €36 million transfer fee.

Gibbs reckons that with the Chile international having been added to a squad already boasting the likes of Mesut Ozil, who was signed from Real Madrid 12 months ago, Arsene Wenger's men are set for a big season.

"When you face Alexis in training, you know it's not going to be the best day you have as a defender," the defender said. "He's a top player and he will definitely bring something extra to us.

"We've got an exciting team anyway and a lot of players who can make a difference in the game and when you see the likes of Mesut Ozil and Alexis ­coming in, it makes you feel good.

"Mesut didn't have an ­arrogance about him. He came in like he still had something to prove – like he wasn't world class already.

"And Alexis has the same ­mentality. He has been like an animal in training. He's everywhere. He just doesn't stop running."

Gibbs did not shy away from setting high targets for Alexis, who has yet to score for Arsenal in pre-season friendlies. 

"Is he the 20-goal-a-season ­striker every team needs? Yes," the 24-year-old full-back said.

"Last season we were top for quite a while before slipping away. This year we want to do exactly the same but go a step further.

"That's what we need – we can't just sign a superstar and then say to ­ourselves: 'Ok, we are going to win ­everything now'.

"We needed them to come in with a great attitude. And that is what's happened