Saturday, March 7, 2009

Voronin hat-trick shoots Berlin four points clear

Andrei Voronin’s hat-trick for Hertha Berlin in a 3-1 victory at Energie Cottbus shot them four points clear in the German League while Bayern Munich cruised up to joint second following a five-goal spree.

Bayern Munich’s 5-1 home thrashing of Hanover propelled them three places up the table to tuck in behind Berlin though they have the same number of points as Hoffenheim, VfL Wolfsburg and Hamburg in a tight pack of clubs at the top.

Ukrainian striker Voronin was in scintillating form in the eastern derby to give him 10 league goals for the season and boost Berlin’s title chances.

Turk Cagtas Atan gave Cottbus an early lead before goals in the 34th, 45th and 88th minutes from Voronin sealed the win in front of a record 20,000-strong crowd.

Under-pressure Bayern coach Jurgen Klinsmann had just the shot in the arm he needed as his side tested the strength of Hanover’s goal netting, blasting five into it.

Bayern, playing without star midfielder Franck Ribery, finally got the victory that staved off a continued crisis of form.

Bayern’s start to 2009 so far has been poor. Since coming back from the winter break at the end of January, they had racked up just one win combined with three defeats and a draw before their Hanover victory.

It was Hanover who went ahead, however. Jiri Stajner shot the visitors into the lead though Bayern were soon back on level terms when Belgian defender Daniel van Buyten headed home six minutes later.

By the break, Munich had scored another two goals through Miroslav Klose and Hatim Altintop before Lukas Podolski hit his fourth goal of the season on 73 minutes before Martin Demichelis finished off the scoring with a minute to go.

Hamburg meanwhile suffered their second successive defeat, losing 4-1 at Borussia Monchengladbach who moved off the bottom of the table with the win.

Mourinho dismisses exit talk

Inter Milan coach Jose Mourinho has rubbished rumours that he could leave the San Siro at the end of the season, according to Sky Sports.

Reports in Italy suggest that the Portuguese manager could face the axe should he fail to secure the UEFA Champions League, after many believe previous manager Roberto Mancini suffered a similiar fate from owner Massimo Moratti despite winning three Scudetti titles in a row.

On top of this the outspoken former Chelsea manager has come under fire from the Italian press this week for verbal attacks on referees and rivals, but Mourinho insists he has no plans to leave in the summer.

Mourinho said :

“In football you never know. You could stay two, three, four, five years, it depends on everything,”

“At the end of the season I will leave Italy to go on holiday in Africa where I will do charity work with children. But I’m certainly not working so that another coach can come in.”

“Am I fed up with Italian football? No, the only adjective I would use to explain how I feel right now is not angry but proud, proud of myself,” he said.

“I’m neither angry nor tense, that’s your feeling. I like to change, sometimes I change my hairstyle. Once I cut it all off, now I’m letting it grow out. Once I turned up with a long beard. But right now I’m absolutely perfect. I like to change but I’m not angry.”

Fergie fears retirement

Manchester United boss Sir Alex Ferguson has admitted to French magazine L’Equipe that he ‘fears’ the idea of retirement.

Fergie has been a hit at Old Trafford in more than 22 years in charge.

“When I reached 60, I asked myself the question,” Ferguson told L’Equipe Magazine. “I almost left.

“But I quickly realised, with my family, that it was a mistake. Today, I fear the idea of retiring.

“I have been on the train for so long that when I get off I fear my system will collapse.

“I have decided not to ask myself the question any more.

“Three things can make me stop. 1. My health. 2. If I don’t take pleasure any more. 3. If I don’t have the strength for new challenges any more.

“Each summer, I have a look at those three things. I go to my doctor first. I had a pacemaker set up four or five years ago.

“Today, I am playing the penalty shoot-out of my managerial career. I know that. The rest is decided between me and me.

“I see my doctor every summer. He says ‘boss, you are 67. You will have more and more back pains. Getting up in the morning sometimes won’t be easy’.

Real Madrid eye Atletico in Spanish League clash

Barcelona held a substantial 12-point gap over Real back on February 15 but that lead has shrunk to just four points in the space of three games with Barcelona drawing against Real Betis before defeats to Espanyol and Atletico Madrid.

Real have rattled out ten straight wins to play their part and hope to continue their pursuit of Barcelona on Saturday with a derby win over Atletico at the Santiago Bernabeu.

“We are four points behind the leaders now and people seem to think our work is over, but this has only just begun,” said Real coach Juande Ramos. “Those people who think we’ll easily catch up with Barcelona are wrong. This is going to be very long.”

Barcelona?s dip in form has been attributed to playing too many games as they fight on three fronts and they were in action in midweek reaching the Spanish Cup final with a 3-1 aggregate win over Real Mallorca.

Barcelona will face Athletic Bilbao in the final and ironically the two finalists meet at Camp Nou on Saturday.

Atletico came from 2-0 down to beat Barca 4-3 last weekend and hope to follow that up with victory over Real to enhance their Champions League hopes with fourth-placed Villarreal three points ahead.

Atletico have not beaten neighbours Real since 1999 and new coach Abel Resino will hope he is the man to break that jinx.

Real goalkeeper Iker Casillas has watched his side close the gap on Barca but said he would rather be in their shoes at the top of the table.

“It was to be expected that Barca wouldn?t win a few matches and something like that could happen to us too,” explained Casillas. “I would swap places with them as they are still in three competitions and four points ahead in the league.”

Real have a tough week with Atletico and then Tuesday?s Champions League match at Liverpool trailing 1-0 from the first leg.

Barcelona coach Pep Guardiola is under the microscope after his team?s loss of form but remains convinced Barcelona will be crowned champions come May.

“I sense we?ll be champions,” said Guardiola. “I always say what I feel and right now I feel like we will start winning again and gain more of an advantage. We just need to get back the shape and aggression we were showing at the start of the season.”

Bilbao thrashed Sevilla 3-0 to reach the Spanish Cup final after a 24-year wait so will go to Barcelona on a high.

Sevilla entertain Almeria on Sunday aiming to bounce back from their cup setback and continue their strong league form that has left them third.

Last season?s cup winners Valencia are in freefall and need to get back on the winning trail after collecting just six points from their last eight games.

Valencia, three points off the Champions League spots, travel to bottom side Numancia on Sunday.

Winger Joaquin insists there is no reason to press the panic button and emphasised that the players were still focused on the job in hand despite the club not paying their wages on time due to financial problems.

Friday, March 6, 2009

Zanetti ready for United clash

Inter Milan captain Javier Zanetti is confident ahead of their Champions League clash with Manchester United at the Stadio Giuseppe Meazza tonight.

“I think we are up against a big team which is doing very well in the Premier League and in the Champions League, but I am confident that we can do it,” said Zanetti.

“We are a very competitive team and this is a clash between two big teams who want to continue in the Champions League.

“We are up against one of the strongest teams in Europe. We respect Manchester a lot, but we are in condition to be able to do very well.”

Spalletti lashes out at Mourinho over title jibe

AS Roma coach Luciano Spalletti on Friday hit out at Inter Milan counterpart Jose Mourinho after the Portuguese coach claimed the Romans would win nothing this season.

Spalletti accused Mourinho of being afraid of Manchester United ahead of the Champions League second round, second leg ties next week.

Mourinho angered Spalletti by claiming in midweek that Roma would win nothing this season despite having many good players he himself would like to sign.

The former Chelsea boss had reacted furiously to suggestions his team had got a penalty they did not deserve in last weekend’s 3-3 draw with Roma.

“Mourinho’s words surprised me a little bit because on Sunday after the match he gave me a cuddle and wished us luck ahead of the Arsenal match (in the Champions League),” said Spalletti.

“But then he wished bad luck on us with that terrible and bad thing he said about winning no titles.

“Mourinho needs to keep calm, he has a very strong team. This thing he said about us winning no titles seemed to me to be more a sign of fear ahead of the Manchester United match.”

Messi needs protection

Barcelona coach Pep Guardiola on Friday once again called for referees to do more to protect Argentine playmaker Lionel Messi from hefty tackles and fouls.

“One day they will really do some damage. Lately, he has been knocked to the floor almost every time he receives the ball,” he told a news conference.

“The referees have an obligation to protect players that are having that done to them. Not only Messi, but anyone,” he added.

He was especially targeted by Real Madrid players during the “classico” between the two arch rival teams in mid-December which the Catalan giants won 2-0.

Roman blasts Berbatov

Tottenham ace Roman Pavlyuchenko has blasted Dimitar Berbatov, ahead of Sunday’s Carling Cup final.

The Russian striker has labelled Berbatov an ‘arrogant snob’ and believes he would not receive a warm welcome should he one day return to Spurs.

“Robbie Keane returned to the Spurs as if he never left the club,” Pavlyuchenko told Russian paper Gazeta Daily .

“It’s evident that he’s a man of authority inside the team which is good for us. He was always liked as far as I can judge.

“If Berbatov returned it would be taken quite differently. I heard tales that he was an arrogant snob who after a training session would just throw his dirty boots to the man who takes care of our footwear saying: ‘Clean them for me!’

“No one likes such people. Still he’s now playing for Manchester United.”

Mourinho dismisses exit talk

Inter Milan boss Jose Mourinho on Friday dismissed speculation that he is set to walk out of the club.

Rumours have spread this week that Mourinho will leave Inter if they fail to win the Champions League this season, despite the club being odds-on favourites to win a fourth straight Serie A crown.

But Mourinho dismissed any such concerns and said he could not determine how long he would stay in Italy.

“Me, leave Italy? In football you never know, you can stay two, three, four or ten years, it all depends,” he told a press conference in Milan ahead of Saturday’s trip to Genoa.

“But one thing’s for sure, I’m not trying to provoke a change of coach.”

Mourinho was questioned about his future in Italy because in midweek he launched a tirade against Italian football and the dramas surrounding it, particularly the manner in which every refereeing decision is analysed and reanalysed in the press.

However, he reacted in typical Mourinho fashion on Friday.

“Am I fed up with Italian football? No, the only adjective I would use to explain how I feel right now is not angry but proud, proud of myself,” he said.

“I’m neither angry nor tense, that’s your feeling. I like to change, sometimes I change my hairstyle.

“Once I cut it all off, now I’m letting it grow out. Once I turned up with a long beard.

“But right now I’m absolutely perfect. I like to change but I’m not angry.”

Mourinho was also in belligerent mood regarding his comments on Tuesday: “What I said on Tuesday is what I wanted to say.”

The former Chelsea boss landed himself in hot water with Italian football bosses over his comments about Juventus earning many points due to refereeing errors.

He could yet face a fine and/or touchline ban for what he said.

He was reacting to questions about his team getting an undeserved penalty in last weekend’s 3-3 draw at home to AS Roma.

His outburst against Juventus came when he was told that Juve coach Claudio Ranieri had agreed with Roma coach Luciano Spalletti’s assertion that the incident should not have resulted in a penalty — Inter forward Mario Balotelli had gone to ground very easily in the area as he tried to slip between Daniele De Rossi and Marco Motta.

“While Ranieri says he is behind Spalletti, I am on the side of coaches who have dropped points against Juve - and also on the side of those who are going to meet Juve in the coming weeks,” Mourino had said on Tuesday before slating all his main rivals.

“Roma, with their great players, so many players that I’d like to have, will end the season with zero titles.

“(AC) Milan will finish the season with zero titles when the club has everything it needs to win - as will Juventus, who have won a lot of points thanks to refereeing errors.”

For now, Inter face a tough trip away to Genoa, who alongside Inter are one of only two teams unbeaten at home this season.

Mourinho has some defensive problems to sort out after his team’s abject performance at the back in Wednesday’s 3-0 Italian Cup defeat to Sampdoria.

Centre-backs Marco Materazzi and Nelson Rivas are almost certain to face the chop even though Walter Samuel and Cristian Chivu are not yet fit.

It means Ivan Cordoba and Nicolas Burdisso should line up as centre-backs on Saturday.

Thursday, March 5, 2009

Blatter fears Premier League ´damage´

FIFA president Sepp Blatter believes the dominance of the Premier League’s big four - Manchester United, Liverpool, Chelsea and Arsenal - is proving unhealthy for competition.

Since the formation of the Premier League in 1992, there have only been four different winners and Blatter is concerned that the priority of most teams is merely to avoid costly relegation.

“In a competition where two-thirds or three-quarters of the participants in the league play not to be first, but not to be relegated, there is something wrong,” Blatter told the BBC.

The FIFA chief added that the global power and appeal of the English Premier League is damaging the sport worldwide.

“I have my concerns because the Premier League is the strongest in the world definitely,” he said.

“It is taking over in such a manner that the other leagues have difficulties to match it.”

Fabregas: If Wenger leaves I leave

Arsenal midfielder Cesc Fabregas has shocked fans by revealing that if manager Arsene Wenger leaves the club then it is likely he will follow the Frenchmen, according to Sky Sports.

Pressure has been slowly mounting on Wenger over the past season and it has now been four years since the clubs last peice of silverware, which came in 2005 with the F.A cup. Arsenal were booed off at the Emirates Stadium last week in their 0-0 draw with Fulham, which at the time was their fourth 0-0 Premier League draw in a row.

With Arsenal out of Premier League title contention for yet another season, many fans believe it is time for the club to appoint fresh blood at the club with numerous top European clubs vying for Wenger to take over.

However, after Fabregas’ bombshell it is likely that the Arsenal board will think again about replacing Wenger in the summer. Fabregas told Catalunya Radio: “I have heard the rumours about Wenger leaving Arsenal for the past three years.

“If he left the club then of course I would consider my own future and whether I would leave the club. I am happy at Arsenal and I believe that we and Barcelona play the best football in Europe. But Wenger is a main part of that.”

Arsenal are already in the middle of contract negotiations with star players Robin van Persie and Theo Walcott and the loss of their captain would be irreversible for the club.

Fabregas has been out of contention with a knee injury sustained in the club’s 1-1 draw with Liverpool in December, but is convinced the can overturn their recent form to qualify for the UEFA Champions League next season.

Fabregas added: “I want to return by April and i still believe that we can finish in the top four and reach the Champions League. But to do that the squad has to be united and fight in every match as if it were a cup final.”

Hleb keen on Bayern Munich move

3Barcelona star Alexander Hleb has admitted he would be keen on a move to German giants Bayern Munich.

Hleb has failed to impress at Camp Nou after joining the club from Arsenal in a £12million move in the summer.

The former Arsenal ace has been linked with a switch to Bayern Munich.

“I am right in the best years of my career and I do not want to spend those years on bench,” the 27-year-old told Bild.

“Bayern Munich is a special club, their interest in me is a delightful honour.

“If there is a club like Bayern interested, this is really great for everyone. Bayern is among the best teams in the world!”

Ribery wants to leave Bayern

French star Franck Ribery is ready to leave Bayern Munich, according to reports from Germany.

The 25-year-old blasted his teammates following their recent problems in the Bundesliga, according to Bild.

Bayern are give points behind Bundesliga leaders Hertha Berlin.

Bayern President Franz Beckenbauer believes Ribery is keen on a move away from the club at the end of the season.

“Ribery has given me the impression of having said things with a clear intention,” Beckenbauer declared.

“It’s always a problem when a player wants to leave and the club doesn’t want to sell him, putting a gun to his chest.”

Ribery has been linked with several clubs, including Manchester City, Juventus, Real Madrid and Barcelona.

Unstoppable Pazzini happy with Samp experience

Sampdoria hammered the reigning Italian champions Inter at the Luigi Ferraris stadium last night, running away with a comprehensive 3-0 victory in the Coppa Italia semi-finals. Giampaolo Pazzini cored two out of the three goals.

“I am overjoyed, as this is a really good time for me,” Pazzini confessed in the interview with Rai Sport. “I’m really happy because I have repaid the confidence and the faith that Sampdoria have shown in me”.

“Tonight’s performance is a major achievement for us. We wanted to have a good match, and we did exactly that. Now we go to Milan with a healthy advantage, meaning that we can easily make it to the final.”

Arminia Bielefeld: We’ll get the points we need

A goal difference of four to the good is all that currently separates Arminia Bielefeld from a bottom-three place. “In the long run, all the draws are not going to get us far”, midfielder Torben Marx tells bundesliga.de .

“The way the game went in Cologne (1-1), we can be quite happy with the draw. We were asleep for the first 20 minutes and were lucky not to have gone more than one down. We had a bit of luck ourselves with the equaliser but after that we got back into the game. The second half was evenly balanced and if we’d exerted more pressure towards the end we might even have come away with more”, Mar added.

Fabregas thinks about an Arsenal exit

Cesc Fabregas has admitted that if Arsene Wenger left Arsenal then he could follow the manager out the exit door.

“I have heard the rumours about Wenger leaving for the past three years,” Fabregas told the Daily Mirror. “If he left the club then of course I would consider my own future and whether I would leave the club”.

“I am happy at Arsenal and believe that we and Barcelona play the best football in Europe. But Wenger is a main part of that.”

Klinsmann: Leverkusen played a great game

Holders Bayern Munich were sent crashing out of the DFB Pokal last night in a goal-filled quarter-final with Bayer Leverkusen.

“Obviously, the players are gutted,” Bayern trainer Juergen Klinsmann said after the game. “We desperately wanted to make the semi-finals but it wasn’t to be and that’s a bitter pill we have to swallow.

“It was an open and attractive match from the off. Leverkusen piled on the pressure. They were very aggressive, and they pressed us in every area of the field. They never let us get going. They played well and deserved to win. We failed to move the ball at speed, stretch the play wide and create space for ourselves.

Sampdoria humiliate Mourinho´s out of form Inter

Inter Milan’s recent run of poor form continued on Wednesday as an admittedly under-strength side were soundly beaten 3-0 by Sampdoria in their Italian Cup semi-final, first leg clash making it a long shot that the Serie A leaders reach their fifth successive Cup final.

Inter, who were second best in a Champions League last 16 first leg match with Manchester United last week and then were held 3-3 by AS Roma last weekend, went down to goals from badboy Antonio Cassano and a double by strike partner Giampaolo Pazzini.

Inter coach Jose Mourinho, with a mind towards this weekend’s tough Serie A match with fifth-placed Genoa and next week’s Champions League match at Old Trafford against United, had decided to rest players such as Zlatan Ibrahimovic, Julio Cesar and Christian Chivu.

Their replacements could not handle it and a disastrous error by Colombian defender Nelson Rivas, who had a catastrophic first-half against United before being withdrawn by Mourinho at half-time, let in Cassano, who made no mistake and shot past Francesco Toldo in the ninth minute.

Padalino then added a double through a header and then a shot three minutes from the break to wrap up victory for Sampdoria.

Inter’s night hardly got better after the break as talented young striker Mario Baslotelli had to go off injured in the 52nd minute having collided with a post.

Inter could not even take advantage of Sampdoria being reduced to 10 men on the hour as defender Daniele Gastaldello was sent off.

Mourinho, who is subject of disciplinary proceedings after making inflammatory remarks following the draw with Roma, took defeat in his stride.

“We conceded a ludicrous first goal and a second off a rebound,” said the Portuguese. “When not everybody is there (as in first choice players), the team is obviously not of the same calibre.

“But I decided I had to make changes because it is not humanly possible for them to play every match.”

Lazio came from behind on Tuesday to beat Juventus 2-1 in their Italian Cup semi-final, first leg after second-half goals from Macedonian forward Goran Pandev and Tommaso Rocchi cancelled out Marco Marchionni’s opener on 34 minutes.

Berba-Rooney double act puts United in sight of title

Dimitar Berbatov and Wayne Rooney were on target as Manchester United extended their advantage at the top of the English Premier League with a hard-fought 2-1 victory at Newcastle United.

An 11th consecutive league victory put United seven points ahead of their nearest challengers Chelsea and Liverpool with a game in hand.

They were made to fight all the way by relegation-threatened Newcastle, who stunned the Premier League champions by taking an early lead thanks to an uncharacteristic error from goalkeeper Edwin van der Sar.

But the hosts were unable to hang on, to leave them without a home win for more than two months and just one victory in 10 league games to increase their worries near the bottom of the table.

Rooney soon had United level before Berbatov?s 13th goal of the season nine minutes after the interval proved decisive.

It arrived from a mistake by Ryan Taylor, whose attempt to chest the ball back to keeper Steve Harper fell short, allowing Park Ji-Sung to intervene, before slipping a square pass to the unmarked Berbatov to tap in.

As expected, Sir Alex Ferguson made wholesale changes for the return to league action, with only four players on duty from the team which beat Tottenham Hotspur at Wembley on Sunday to claim the League Cup, the second of five possible trophies targeted by United.

Cristiano Ronaldo saw an early goal-bound shot deflected wide by Fabricio Coloccini, but the leaders were soon on the back foot as their seven-game run without conceding an away league goal was brought to a halt after just nine minutes.

Newcastle broke swiftly downfield as Michael Carrick?s corner came to nothing. Obafemi Martins combined with Jonas Gutierrez and Jose Enrique in a 70-yard surge, before the latter?s reverse pass found the Argentina international in space on the edge of the box.

The midfielder?s curling effort looked like providing a routine save for van der Sar, only for the keeper to inexplicably fumble the shot, with Peter Lovenkrands needing no second invitation to sweep the loose ball into the unguarded net from six yards for the Dane?s second goal in four starts since signing in January.

It was the first league goal conceded by van der Sar in more than 14 games spanning 1311 minutes, almost 22 hours? football, since Samir Nasri scored past the Dutch international in Arsenal?s 2-1 victory in November.

Martins came within inches of doubling the advantage moments later as the speedy striker fired into the side-netting.

But Newcastle were left to rue their failure to make more of their territorial advantage when Rooney fired United level in spectacular style on 20 minutes.

John O?Shea?s low centre from the right found Rooney with seemingly few options with his back to goal on the edge of the area.

What appeared to be an unfavourable position soon became anything but as the forward turned in an instant to lose his marker Coloccini, before firing a stunning left-foot effort past Steve Harper with the aid of a slight deflection off defender Steven Taylor.

Newcastle continued to pose much more of a threat, and Nemanja Vidic was fortunate not to deflect Ryan Taylor?s centre into his own net just after the half-hour.

Van der Sar continued his uncomfortable night by flapping at Taylor?s resulting corner, but as the ball bounced free, captain Rio Ferdinand was alert to block Martins? close-range effort as the danger was cleared.

After Berbatov had put them ahead, United took control of the match and it took a fine save from Harper to deny Ronaldo from extending the advantage further as Newcastle left gaps at the back in their quest for an equaliser.

Dutch Cup: Twente and Heerenveen through to semi’s

FC Twente and SC Heerenveen are through to the semi final stage of the Dutch Cup, beating De Graafschap and NEC Nijmegen respectively.

The match between Twente and De Graafschap, played at Enschede’s Arke stadium, was headed for penalties until Marko Arnautovic’ dramatic winner on 121 minutes, 1-0.

Lasse Schöne put NEC in the lead at Heerenveen after 37 minutes, but Paulo Henrique equalised the very next minute.

Patrik Ingelsten then made it 2-1 on 74 minutes and Viktor Elm added a third, a few minutes later.

In Thursday’s semi finals, AZ Alkmaar face NAC while Roda JC host Volendam.

Tuesday, March 3, 2009

Season starts now, says Fergie

Sir Alex Ferguson has insisted that Manchester United’s race for glory starts now after claiming that the season will only be a success if his players land the “big” trophies between now and the end of May.

United, who added the League Cup to the FIFA Club World Cup trophy by defeating Spurs at Wembley last Sunday, have the chance to take another step towards sealing a hat-trick of Premier League titles by claiming three points at Newcastle on Wednesday evening.

Ferguson’s men are still on course for an unprecedented quintuple this season, with the team going strong in the league, Champions League and FA Cup.

But the United manager insists the real trophies are still up for grabs and that the silverware already collected this season will not be sufficient.

Ferguson said: “The only way we hope this season ends is with us winning the big ones.

“Winning the Club World Cup in December was an exceptional achievement, but the League Cup was fourth in our list of priorities at the start of the season.

“Now we have won it, though, we just move on because, for me, the Premier League and Champions League are the major trophies, with the FA Cup in third place.

“If we win one major trophy a year, then I am happy with that.

“I’d love to see us win the Champions League, that’s my big desire, but at this moment in time, the Premier League looks to be our best opportunity.

“And if we keep our heads straight and focus, then we’ll have a big chance.”

United have opened up a formidable lead at the top of the Premier League since returning from World Club Cup duty in Japan in December.

But Ferguson admits that no lead is insurmountable and he claims that Barcelona’s recent problems in Spain’s La Liga underline the need for his players to stay focused.

He said: “Barcelona are now four points ahead and they were eleven not so long ago. For the first time this season, they lost a game when they had a lead at the weekend.

“So there’s plenty of warnings in football, but we don’t need to look at Barcelona. We look at ourselves.

“If you take your foot off the pedal you can get a real kick in the teeth.”

United´s focus back on the title as clean sweep bid gathers pace

Manchester United return to Premier League action at Newcastle on Wednesday with Old Trafford legend Sir Bobby Charlton admitting the possibility of completing a remarkable clean sweep of five trophies this season can’t be ruled out.

Sunday’s League Cup success allied to their Club World Cup victory in December puts the Old Trafford club well on the way to creating history as they eye further success in the Champions League, Premier League and FA Cup to complete a stunning clean-sweep.

After that dramatic 4-1 penalty shoot-out victory over Tottenham at Wembley, Sir Alex Ferguson’s side turn their attention back to cementing their advantage on top of the Premier League.

United tackle Newcastle on the back of a 15-game unbeaten league run, their last 10 games all victories, during which time they’ve conceded just one goal.

It has propelled them back to the top of the table with a seven-point cushion over Chelsea and Liverpool, which has them strong favourites to clinch their third consecutive domestic title.

Charlton, who received the Freedom of the City of Manchester at a ceremony on Monday in recognition of his record-breaking 20-year Old Trafford playing career and ambassadorial work for the club, admitted the quintuple is possible but realistically remains unlikely.

“People are saying United can possibly win five trophies this year. We’ve got two but of course the others are not so easy. I’m not going to say we’re not going to do it, and we’ll have a crack,” he said.

“But I have to say that I don’t agree with those people who say the league is over.

“We have too many games to play and we have too many good teams to play against so to say it’s over is crazy.

“We are the favourites to do that, that’s obvious, but it’s not a foregone conclusion, although I wouldn’t put anything past this set of players.”

Ferguson has the luxury of being able to restore Wayne Rooney, Dimitar Berbatov, Edwin van der Sar and Michael Carrick, who were not even in the League Cup final squad, to the side as United look to further improve a run that has seen them win five of their last six visits to St James’ Park, scoring 20 goals in the process.

Troubled Newcastle are the only team to earn a point at Old Trafford this season, but the Tyneside club desperately need a victory to halt a sequence of one win in 11 games.

It leaves them just two points above the relegation zone as they face a daunting sequence of consecutive home games against United, Arsenal and Chelsea.

A knee ligament problem forces Newcastle’s Nicky Butt to miss out against his former club, leaving Chris Hughton with a problem in midfield.

The caretaker manager is already without injured trio Joey Barton, Damien Duff and Danny Guthrie, while Kevin Nolan is suspended.

Alan Smith comes in as cover, with the England international set to make his first start in 10 months after a persistent ankle problem.

Newcastle’s 16-year stay in the Premier League is under serious threat, and defender Steven Taylor admitted: “We’re in a relegation fight and we have to be men and stand up to the challenge.”

Keeper Steve Harper added: “We should have the best part of a full house and the supporters will be looking for us to give 100 percent commitment.

“It is important all the lads are on their game because they will have to be. We have to go out there all guns blazing and take on the champions.”

City hit by striker crisis for Villa visit

Manchester City’s hopes of derailing Aston Villa’s drive for Champions League football have been hit by the loss of Brazilian star Robinho for Wednesday’s Premier League match at Eastlands.

Robinho has failed to recover from a knee injury suffered in the defeat at West Ham on Sunday and joins Craig Bellamy on the sidelines, leaving manager Mark Hughes with a major headache in terms of attacking options.

The City boss could be forced to turn to Bulgarian forward Valeri Bojinov, whose appearance as a substitute at West Ham on Sunday was his first since he ruptured an Achilles tendon in August.

“We may well have to play Boj on Wednesday, although it is probably a bit too soon to expect him to play 90 minutes in the Premier League,” Hughes admitted.

“I am pleased we got him on at West Ham because he has not had much Premier League experience.

“It was important that he got a taste of it as soon as possible and we were able to do that, so that was a positive. It is still early in his comeback and we will have to see how he goes. He is a good option for us.”

The 1-0 defeat at West Ham epitomised how poor City have been on the road this season but Hughes’s squad’s home record is bettered only by their crosstown rivals United.

Midfielder Stephen Ireland said the players were determined to be more consistent. “We know what we have to do to get back on track and we’re going to set it right against Villa,” he said.

“We missed out on a good opportunity to go seventh in the table and now we’ve big games coming up against top-four sides.

“Hopefully we can get out of this cycle of losing away from home, but the big clubs tend to bring out the best in us.”

Villa will be looking to consolidate their grip on fourth place in the table and Martin O’Neill’s side will be able go give their all at Eastlands, knowing that a weekend off in the Dubai sunshine awaits them thanks to their early exit from the FA Cup.

Having squandered a two-goal lead against Stoke on Sunday, O’Neill’s men also have to demonstrate that their nerve is not failing them as the season heads for a tense finale.

“We can give the Manchester City game everything, as we then have a 10-day break,” said Villa’s Norway striker, John Carew. “We need to get our momentum going again with a victory.”

Villa travel north looking for an eighth consecutive away league win but they have now gone five matches without triumphing in the league, FA Cup and UEFA Cup over the last fortnight.

O’Neill could certainly do with Emile Heskey being fit for Wednesday evening but the England forward faces a late test of his troublesome Achilles.

If Heskey does not make it, Carew is likely to make his first league start since returning from a back problem last month.

Dutch defender Wilfred Bouma is not being considered despite playing his first match in eight months, for the reserves earlier this week. Bouma had been out with a dislocated ankle.

Kosovo to join UEFA only after recognition in UN

UEFA president Michel Platini said on Tuesday that Kosovo could not join the organisation until it was recognised by the United Nations.

“The situation is very simple, UEFA, FIFA do not go in for politics… the only thing UEFA can do at the present is to respect the statutes of UEFA and the statutes clearly say that to be affiliated with UEFA it is necessary to be recognised by the United Nations,” Platini told reporters in Belgrade.

Kosovo, which unilaterally declared independence from Serbia a year ago, has been recognised by more than 50 countries, including the United States and most of the European Union countries.

However, Serbia and its traditional ally Russia, a permanent member of UN Security Council, have rejected the move and consider it illegal.

During his visit to Belgrade Platini met Serbian Deputy Prime Minister and Interior Minister Ivica Dacic to discuss the fight against hooliganism at stadia.

“We discussed what measures should be taken to fight against hooligans, racism and xenophobia,” Platini said.

Diego wants to join Juventus

Brazilian ace Diego has admitted he would like to join Italian giants Juventus at the end of the season.

The 23-year-old has also been linked with Manchester City, Real Madrid and Chelsea in recent weeks.

But the Werder Bremen ace’s father has revealed his son favours a move to Juventus, as he would like to be at a club that can win the Champions League.

Djair da Cunha said: “Diego wants Juventus and he would win the Ballon d’Or in the Bianconeri jersey.

“It’s such a big satisfaction knowing that all the Juve fans admire him and I would be really happy if the deal with Werder Bremen makes progress.

“My son dreams about playing for a club that wins in Europe.”

Bendtner ends Arsenal goal drought

Nicklas Bentner breathed new life into Arsenal’s hopes of securing a top-four finish in the English Premier League as he inspired a 3-1 victory over West Bromwich Albion on Tuesday.

The Danish striker has been the target of ferocious criticism by sections of the north Londoners’ support this season but played his way back into their affections with two first-half goals to take his season’s tally to 11.

Albion had briefly threatened an upset when Chris Brunt’s free-kick cancelled out the first of them, but after they gifted Kolo Toure an easy second goal, their hopes all but evaporated.

Their chances of remaining in the top flight could go the same way unless they somehow instil some resilience into their flowing football.

Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger’s own concerns, meanwhile, are now not so acute.

Fourth-placed Aston Villa’s advantage over his team is down to three points, although that could be extended to six when they travel to Manchester City on Wednesday, and this was undoubtedly a more purposeful performance, even if it did come against the Premier League’s worst defence.

Indeed, his only regret on a generally pleasing night was an injury to Toure, which prevented his captain emerging for the second-half.

No side in English top flight history had ever recorded five consecutive goalless draws but Arsenal were 90 minutes away from achieving just that before this game.

In the event, Wenger should not have been concerned. This West Brom defence specialises in resuscitating flat-lining forwards and Arsenal won at a canter, even though their best player - Robin van Persie - remained on the bench.

Instead, Wenger paired Bendtner with the diminutive Andrei Arshavin, and to spectacular effect.

The game was only into its fourth minute when Samir Nasri’s corner was partially cleared to Denilson and the Brazilian slipped a pass to Bendtner, who cut inside Ryan Donk and curled his shot into the bottom corner.

The relief among Arsenal’s travelling throng was palpable but no sooner had their side jettisoned one bad habit - profligacy in front of goal - than they rekindled another by leaking an eminently avoidable goal.

After Johan Djourou had clumsily fouled Luke Moore on the edge of the area, Brunt stepped up and drove a low, left-footed free-kick which skidded underneath Emmanuel Eboue’s raised boot and past goalkeeper Manuel Almunia’s outstretched hand.

Moore duly tested Almunia again with a snap-shot at the near post, but that was as good as it got for West Brom. Instead, their limp defence capitulated meekly in the dying moments of the first-half.

First, in the 38th minute, Gianni Zuiverloon allowed Arshavin’s inswinging free-kick to sail over his head, with Toure nodding past Carson with contemptuous ease; then, in the 44th, Abdoulaye Meite failed to cut out Toure’s long ball and Bendtner, hardly believing his luck, crunched home on the angle.

The scoreline might have acquired an embarrassing hue in the second-half, only for Carson to set up a one-man blockade.

The England goalkeeper twice denied the lively Arshavin with exceptional saves from close range, although he could only join his defenders in watching as Bendtner ran 20 yards, drifting past tackle after tackle, before shooting against the left-hand post.

Albion might have set up a grandstand finish when Marc-Antoine Fortune broke clear but dragged well wide with only Almunia to beat, a moment which summed up manager Tony Mowbray’s evening.

Drogba keeps Chelsea in title hunt

If Manchester United have already got the Premier League title in their grasp nobody has told Chelsea manager Guus Hiddink.

His side staged another late show to beat strugglers Portsmouth 1-0 at Fratton Park here on Tuesday and close the gap on champions and leaders United to just four points - however United can restore their seven point lead on Wednesday should they beat Newcastle, and they also have a game in hand.

Chelsea needed a 90th minute winner to overcome a battling Wigan side at Stamford Bridge on Saturday and it took until 11 minutes from time for striker Didier Drogba to register only his second league goal of the season and maintain temporary boss Hiddink’s 100 percent record in charge.

Until the Ivory Coast international forward finished neatly from substitute Ricardo Quaresma’s cross, Chelsea had produced an unconvincing performance.

But, as Hiddink’s United counterpart Sir Alex Ferguson will testify, it is upon such scrappy victories that title challenges are built.

Chelsea were without the services of France striker Nicolas Anelka and for long periods on a rain drenched south coast they lacked any cutting edge.

Portsmouth had never beaten the visitors in a Premier League game but could have taken the lead inside the opening minute when Herman Hreidarsson came marauding forward from left-back and saw his close range shot deflected wide by Jose Bosingwa.

It took until the ninth minute for Hiddink’s revitalised side to threaten David James’ goal when Florent Malouda broke down the left before picking out Salomon Kalou unmarked at the back post.

Kalou is not renowned for his finishing and a mistimed attempted half-volley was cleared by Hreidarsson.

Chelsea began to dominate possession after an uncertain opening 15 minutes and Drogba was inches away from turning home Ashley Cole’s driven low left wing cross after arriving late at James’ back post.

Portsmouth were unfortunate not to take the lead against the run of play when boyhood Chelsea supporter Sean Davis saw his stinging 25-yard pile driver turned behind by the fingertips of Petr Cech.

Germany midfielder Michael Ballack almost bought the first-half to a positive conclusion for Chelsea when his header from Lampard’s left wing corner shaved the crossbar.

The second-half got off to a laboured start until the 59th minute when striker David Nugent turned past England captain John Terry on the edge of the penalty area and found himself one on one with Cech.

The Chelsea goalkeeper stood firm and showed strong wrists to block Nugent’s left foot effort.

Drogba almost opened the scoring in the 66th minute when he came racing onto Quaresma’s cross but put a flying near post header just over the top.

If Portsmouth lose their battle against relegation, Niko Kranjcar will forever be haunted by his glaring 69th minute miss.

Chelsea committed everybody forward for an attacking corner, which was cleared to Peter Crouch on the halfway line and the England striker had a clear run to the edge of Cech?s 18-yard box.

Crouch squared the ball across to Kranjcar, who looked certain to score but the Croatian international could only prod a left foot shot wide with just the stranded Cech to beat.

Chelsea have made a habit of scoring late goals since Hiddink took over from Luiz Felipe Scolari and it was with a sense of inevitability that Drogba finally found his finishing touch in the 79th minute.

Quaresma beat Hreidarsson down Portsmouth?s left hand side and fizzed in a low cross, which Ballack left for Drogba to bury an unstoppable right foot shot past James from 12 yards.

N´Gog inspires Liverpool to victory

Liverpool’s faint hopes of winning the Premier League title remained alive after teenage striker David N’Gog inspired Rafa Benitez’s side to a 2-0 win over Sunderland at Anfield here on Tuesday.

The 19-year-old marked his first league start at Anfield by opening the scoring - his first goal in the Premiership - before having a hand in Yossi Benayoun’s goal which sealed victory.

It will still require a spectacular collapse by Manchester United if Liverpool are to win the title for the first time since 1990.

Benitez’s men are four points behind Sir Alex Ferguson’s leaders having played two more games.

But at least Liverpool travel to United for their next league game on March 14 with confidence restored after a poor run of domestic form.

With Fernando Torres still missing with his troublesome hamstring problem, N’Gog was given a rare chance to impress, his only previous league start coming at Portsmouth last month where he was replaced before Liverpool came back to to win 3-2.

Yet his only contribution during Liverpool’s sluggish start came when he was booked for a late challenge on Tal Ben-Haim in the 15th minute.

Even more bizarre was Benitez’s decision to employ Javier Mascherano, the Argentina midfielder, at right-back in the absence of Alvaro Arbeloa.

It is nine years since Sunderland scored a Premier League goal at Anfield, Kevin Phillips finding the net in a 1-1 draw in 2000.

But they were presented with a golden chance to take the lead after a fourth minute mistake by Martin Skrtel allowed Kenwyne Jones a clear run at goalkeeper Jose Reina.

Fortunately for Benitez, Reina stood his ground and denied Sunderland’s Trinidad and Tobago striker his 10th goal of the campaign.

Liverpool were edgy and nervous in the wake of Saturday’s title-damaging defeat at Middlesbrough and it did not help their cause that the atmosphere around Anfield was decidedly flat with most home fans having resigned themselves to the fact that the title will not be arriving on Merseyside in two months time.

Sunderland had arrived in the north west with confidence sky high following a vast improvement in form under Ricky Sbragia following Roy Keane’s departure before Christmas.

That new-found belief under the Scotsman was illustrated in the 24th minute when Grant Leadbitter attempted to embarrass Reina from long-range, the midfielder’s effort sailing wide of the target.

It was not until the 31st minute that Liverpool went close to breaking the deadlock.

Even then Marton Fulop was able to palm Albert Riera’s deflected effort behind for a corner before makeshift right-back Mascherano went close with a stinging angled effort which flew inches over the bar.

It said much about Liverpool’s first half performance that, despite starting in defence, Mascherano was his team’s most threatening player in the first-half, and he again went close after being teed-up by N’Gog in the dying moments of the first-half.

Liverpool were much slicker in the second half and clinched only their third league win in eight home outings with two goals in the space of 13 minutes as Sunderland’s defence, so stubborn in the first half, quickly crumbled.

N’Gog ended their anxiety when he produced a hooked finish in front of The Kop after Gerrard had nodded Riera’s 52nd minute cross into his path.

That spelled the end of the game for Sunderland and they found themselves 2-0 behind after Fulop spilled N”Gog’s overhead kick, a gift Benayoun accepted as the Israel international tapped home from close range.

FC Barcelona plan for Miami MLS team dumped

Miami is no longer a candidate for a Major League Soccer expansion team after FC Barcelona and the league agreed the poor economic conditions made it unfeasible to launch an MLS team there in 2010.

The announcement made by the league said all sides agreed the timing was wrong after extensive discussions and evaluations, although franchise applicant Marcelo Claure and FC Barcelona still plan to work with the league on projects.

“I want to thank both FC Barcelona and Marcelo Claure for the tremendous effort to bring an MLS expansion team to Miami,” MLS commissioner Don Garber said.

Barca have not given up on making a bigger foothold in America.

“The US market continues to be a priority for FC Barcelona,” chief executive Joan Oliver said. We will look for additional ways to strengthen our relationship with MLS and America?s soccer fans.”

The US league will begin its 14th season in two weeks with 15 clubs with a new team set to begin play next year in Philadelphia and two more set to be added in 2011.

Juve furious amid Mourinho claims of ref favours

Juventus reacted with fury on Tuesday after Inter Milan coach Jose Mourinho implied the club received favourable treatment from referees.

Mourinho made the comments at a press conference which saw him allude to the controversy which ensued following the Serie A leaders’ 3-3 draw with AS Roma - a match in which his men recovered to bag a point with the aid of a contested spot kick.

Mario Balotelli netted the penalty but Roma boss Luciano Spalletti was livid and accused Balotelli of diving.

Juventus coach Claudio Ranieri - like Mourinho a former Chelsea coach - saw fit to back Spalletti and that angered the Inter coach, who promptly insinuated that Juve received preferential treatment from referees.

“While Ranieri says he is behind Spalletti, I am on the side of coaches who have dropped points against Juve - and also on the side of those who are going to meet Juve in the coming weeks,” Mourino said ahead of Wednesday’s Italian Cup semi-final meeting with Sampdoria.

Detecting what he termed an “organised attempt to manipulate public opinion” against his team Mourinho then proceeded to slate his team’s rivals, prophesying that “Roma, with their great players, so many players that I’d like to have, will end the season with zero titles.

“(AC) Milan will finish the season with zero titles when the club has everything it needs to win - as will Juventus, who have won a lot of points thanks to refereeing errors.”

The temperamental Mourinho, accepting that there had been one occasion, in Siena, that Inter might have themselves benefited from a refereeing mistake, then turned on his heel and left the interview room.

Juve later issued a statement expressing the Turin club’s “indignation”, while calling on Inter “to disassociate itself publicly from such claims.”

Juve accused Mourinho of a lack of respect - to Italian football as well as to the club.

Inter, who could only draw last week at home to Manchester United in the Champions League round of 16, currently lead the table by seven points from Juve with 12 games left.

Schalke caught on the Bance in German Cup

Schalke 04’s disappointing season continued on Tuesday as they were knocked out of the German Cup 1-0 by Second Division Mainz in their quarter-final clash.

An 88th minute goal by Burkina Faso’s Aristide Bance was enough to end four-time Cup winners Schalke’s interest in the competition and send Mainz - who are second in their division - into the semi-finals for the first time in their history.

Schalke’s exit heaps the pressure on their Dutch coach Fred Rutten as they are eighth in the league, nine points adrift of leaders Hertha Berlin.

The other three quarter-finals are on Wednesday with the headline encounter between defending champions Bayern Munich and Bayer Leverkusen with the Munich club looking to set aside from some indifferent league form of late.

“We are aware that we have to knuckle down and work hard,” said Bayern coach Jurgen Klinsmann, whose side have lost two and drawn one of their last three league matches.

“We want to go the whole way in all three competitions that we are involved in,” added Klinsmann, whose side look certain to progress in the Champions League having thrashed Sporting Lisbon 5-0 away last week.

Bayern’s form may be poor but their opponent’s is worse with three defeats, a draw and a win in their last five matches.

Figo never wanted to leave Barcelona

Inter Milan star Luis Figo has revealed he never wanted to leave Barcelona.

The Portuguese star claims he wanted to stay at Barcelona rather than move to their rivals Real Madrid.

Figo became one of the most hated men in Catalonia following his move to Real Madrid.

“I didn’t lie when I said that I wanted to stay with Barcelona. I wanted to remain there and the president also knew that,” he declared.

“My only mistake back then was to say in an interview that I would not go.”

He added: “When I retire I will visit Barcelona again. They may not ask me for autographs, but I will will return. I continue to have a lot of respect for the fans, I have a Catalan daughter and I knew my partner there…For, it is an important place, and I am proud to have played there. They were five good years of my life.”

Football Legends - Roberto Baggio


ITALY
1982-2004
Vicenza (1982-1985)
Fiorentina (1985-1990)
Juventus (1990-1995)
AC Milan (1995-1997)
Bologna (1997-1998)
Inter Milan (1998-2000)
Brescia (2000-2004)

One of the most popular Italian players to play the game, Baggio more than lived up to the adoration and adulation of the fans. With his good looks and charisma, he became a bonafide superstar and ranks as possibly the most famous Italian player of all time. He wasn’t just flash, though, as he averaged nearly a goal every two matches despite playing his entire career in defensive-minded Italy, and he scored 27 times in 56 appearances for the Italian national team. Even his playing style was attractive, as he became known for his dazzling runs into the box, his ability to elude defenders, and his skill at flicking passes or shots with either foot.

Baggio won Serie A titles with both Juventus and AC Milan. He also won a Coppa Italia while with Juventus, and added a UEFA Cup title to his haul in 1995. Baggio won the Ballon d’Or and the FIFA World Player of the Year Award in 1993, after leading Juventus to the UEFA Cup and scoring 30 goals in all competitions. In 2002, he was named to FIFA’s All-Time Dream Team, alongside players like Pele, Maradona, Beckenbauer, Cruijff, and Platini.

Obviously, he is most famous (or infamous) for missing a penalty kick during the shootout in the 1994 World Cup Final against Brazil. While his miss didn’t cost the Italians the match, as Brazil were ahead and would have won if they had converted their next kick, his miss clinched the title for Brazil. The miss overshadowed what had been a great tournament for him, as he named to the World Cup Starting XI and his 5 goals were tied for second-most among all players. He also played well in 1990, scoring the “Goal of the Tournament” against Czechoslovakia, and in 1998, when he became the first Italian player to score in three World Cups.

He accomplished so much and he was such a special player that it’s a shame that many people only know about his penalty miss in 1994.

Football Legends - Gerd Müller


GERMANY
1963-1981
TSV 1861 Nördlingen (1963-1964)
Bayern Munich (1964-1979)
Fort Lauderdale Strikers (1979-1981)

The phrase “Goal Machine” gets thrown around a lot. Müller, however, more than lived up to his reputation as a goal scorer, finding the net an astonishing 365 times in 427 Bundesliga matches, and 68 times in 62 international appearances. Müller wasn’t very tall (5’9’’), wasn’t very fast, and had short stubby legs that made him look like the last person capable of scoring on the pitch. However, his short, powerful legs allowed him to accelerate past defenders with ease, stay on his feet even after being tackled by defenders, and gave him a surprising amount of leverage in winning headers.

Known as “Bomber der Nation” (the nation’s bomber), Müller, along with Sepp Maier and Franz Beckenbauer, was part of the great Bayern Munich teams of the 70’s. He won four Bundelisga titles, four German Cups, one Cup Winners’ Cup, and three consecutive European Cups from 1974-1976. He led the Bundesliga in scoring seven times and won the Golden Boot twice. He still holds the Bundesliga’s single-season scoring record with 40 goals in 1971-1972, and his 66 goals in 72 European Cup matches is still a record. He is, by far, the all-time leading scorer in Bundesliga history, having scored nearly 100 more goals than the person in second place.

His success continued to the international stage, as he was part of the Golden Generation of West German football. He was part of the 1972 European Championship squad and provided the goal scoring that led West Germany to the 1974 World Cup. Playing in his final international match, Müller scored the game-winning goal in the Final against the Netherlands. He finished his World Cup career with 14 goals, a record that stood until Ronaldo passed it in 2006.

He has continued his involvement with Bayern Munich, coaching the reserve team. Unlike his fellow German icons, Maier and Beckenbauer, he has kept a low profile following his retirement, choosing not to voice his opinion on controversial matters relating to German football. Despite his low-key approach, Müller remains one of the most beloved and respected players of all time.

Football Legends - Ferenc Puskás


HUNGARY
1943-1966
Kispest A.C. (1943-1949)
Honved (1949-1955)
Espanyol (guest 1957)
Real Madrid (1958-1966)

Like his celebrated teammate at Real Madrid, Alfredo Di Stefano, Puskás was a goal machine who became a naturalized Spanish citizen. Like Di Stefano, Puskás had an enviable goal-to-games ratio, netting 187 goals in 177 league appearances for Kispest A.C., 165 goals in 164 league appearances for Honved, and 157 goals in 182 league appearances for Real Madrid. Throw in his 84 goals in 85 appearances for Hungary, and Puskás was unquestionably one of the most efficient scorers of all time.

He was a deadly left-footed shooter who could set up goals just as well as he could score them. He certainly didn’t look the part of a goal scorer, being short, stocky, and unable to shoot with his right foot. However, he was regarded as one of the greatest outside shooters of all time, and, well, the stats speak for themselves.

He was part of the “Mighty Magyars,” a talent-laden Hungarian National Team that was favored to win the World Cup in 1954. Puskás did his part in the group stage, scoring three goals in the first two matches before getting injured. He didn’t return until the Finals, and was hobbled and out of form as West Germany (who had lost to Hungary by a score of 8-3 in the group stage) upset them. Despite his injury, he scored the first of Hungary’s two goals, and he thought he scored the equalizer until he was controversially ruled off-side. He suited up for Spain in the 1962 World Cup, but failed to score any goals.

Puskás was on tour in Spain with Honved when the Revolution of 1956 broke out in Hungary. Puskás decided to defect to Spain, and the ensuing controversy over his immigration status found him banned from football for two years. He played in a few unofficial matches for Espanyol before signing with Real Madrid. There, he teamed with fellow immigrant Alfredo Di Stefano to give the club a dominant strike force. Their dominance was on display during the 1960 European Cup Final, when Real Madrid defeated Eintracht Frankfurt by a score of 7-3, with Puskás scoring four goals and Di Stefano adding three. Puskás won five La Liga crowns and was a member of the team for three out of Real Madrid’s five consecutive European Cups. He also won five Hungarian League crowns and was named FIFA World Player of the Year twice.

Despite his defection, Puskás remains revered in Hungary. He was named the country’s greatest player of the last 50 years, and the Puskás Ferenc Stadion in Budapest was named in his honor.

Football Legends - Pele


BRAZIL
1956-1977
Santos (1956-1974)
New York Cosmos (1975-1977)

There are legends, there are icons, and then there’s Pele. Without question, Pele is the greatest player of all time, someone whose talent transcended the game. If you don’t know anything else about football, you know that Pele was the best. Much like how Jimi Hendrix is considered to be greatest guitarist that ever lived and Michael Jordan is the greatest basketball player of all time, Pele is the greatest footballer ever to walk the planet. Some people might come up with contrarian arguments, just to be different. They might say that Maradona was better, just like how some people claim that Clapton was better than Hendrix or that Oscar Robertson was better than Jordan.

Don’t buy it.

Pele scored 1,281 goals, a number made all the more remarkable since these are just the ones recognized by FIFA. By contrast, Romario claimed to have scored 1,000 goals, however some of them came during his days with the youth team and others were in unsanctioned events. He scored 77 goals in 92 appearances for Brazil, and scored 589 domestic goals in 605 appearances. When he came out of retirement to play for the Cosmos, he managed to bag 31 goals in 56 games while doing something that David Beckham couldn’t do, namely, turning the Cosmos into an American phenomenon.

He revolutionized the forward position, blending his playmaking skills with his deadly shot to become the ultimate weapon. He was a great dribbler and passer, and was blessed with blistering pace and exception aerial skills. He made the number 10 shirt synonymous with his playmaking abilities, and as a result, he turned what had been a random shirt assignment into a coveted number usually reserved for a team’s best player. Whenever teams say that they’re looking for a “number 10,” they’re really referring to Pele.

He was a part of four World Cup squads, winning three of them. He won 25 trophies while playing with Santos, and added to his cabinet with an NASL Title while with the Cosmos. He has a whole slew of individual and lifetime achievement awards, which are too many to name. Suffice it to say that it’s a bigger story when Pele doesn’t win an award than when he does.

He is a national icon, a global ambassador for the game, and a philanthropist who has used his fame to help those less fortunate than he is. Based on his playing statistics alone, he would be the greatest player of all time. However, his off-the-field activities make him a true legend, and an icon that everyone can embrace.

Football Legends - Marco van Basten


NETHERLANDS
1982-1993
Ajax Amsterdam (1982-1987)
AC Milan (1987-1993)

His career was cut short by injuries, but what a career it was! Van Basten had an incredible goals-to-games ratio for both club and country. He found the net 218 times in 280 league appearances in both the Netherlands and Italy, and he scored 24 times in 58 appearances for the national team. In all, he scored 301 goals in 428 total appearances for club and country.

His main attribute was his strength on the ball, which allowed him to score in crowded areas. Indeed, he was so big and strong that he seemed to invite hard challenges from defenders, leading to his career-ending injury. Despite his size and strength, he was extremely agile and skilled, capable of scoring off bicycle kicks and overhead kicks. He was also known for his thunderous shot, which allowed him to score from distance as well.

He won three Eredivisie titles, three Dutch Cups, and one UEFA Cup during his time at Ajax, and added three Serie A titles, three Italian Supercups, and back-to-back European Cups (1988 and 1989). Along the way, he racked up a slew of individual honors, including the Golden Boot for the 1985-1986 season when he scored 37 goals in 26 league appearances for Ajax. He won the Ballon d’Or three times (1988, 1989, 1992), World Soccer Player of the Year twice (1988, 1992), FIFA World Player of the Year once (1992), and UEFA Player of the Year three times (1989, 1990, 1992). More amazingly, he led the Eredivisie in scoring every single season he played at Ajax, except for his rookie season, and was the top scorer in Serie A twice (1989-1990, 1991-1992).

He won Euro 88, scoring 5 goals, including a hat trick against England and their legendary goalkeeper Peter Shilton in the group stage. He also led the Netherlands to the semi-finals of Euro 1992, where they lost to Denmark in a shootout. Van Basten only played in one World Cup, which was in 1990. His Netherlands team lost to eventual champions West Germany in the Round of 16.

Van Basten eventually retired because of a serious ankle injury. His career may have been cut short, but his brilliance was unquestionable.

Football Legends - Zinedine Zidane


FRANCE
1988-2006
AS Cannes (1988-1992)
Bordeaux (1992-1996)
Juventus (1996-2001)
Real Madrid (2001-2006)

When people ask me who the greatest player of the last 10 years was, I say, without any hesitation at all, Zinedine Zidane. Of course, people then come back with “Oh, the guy who committed the headbutt in the World Cup Final?” Yeah, Zidane was a hothead, and he ended his career on the worst possible note imaginable. However, it doesn’t diminish his brilliance, nor does it detract from his accomplishments.

Zidane was, arguably, the best playmaking international midfielder since Maradona. He was the heartbeat of the French National Team that dominated from 1998-2000, winning both the World Cup and the European Championship. If there were any doubt about how important he was to his country, look no further than the 2002 World Cup, where an injured Zidane watched the first two French matches from the bench and hobbled onto the field for the third and was unable to prevent France from being eliminated without scoring a single goal. Additionally, France’s struggles in qualifying for the 2006 World Cup without Zidane, and their poor display at Euro 2008 only underscored how reliant the team had become on his brilliant playmaking.

He wasn’t just a playmaker, though, and he was more than capable of putting the ball in the net on his own. He was a great free-kicker and was one of the best headers in the game. He had exquisite ball control skills and was great at keeping possession of the ball, especially when going forward. He had a ferocious shot, and he could finish from long-range or up close.

On the club level, Zidane was just as great as he was on the international scene. He won two Scudetti with Juventus and he won the Champions League and La Liga with Real Madrid. Additionally, he won the Ballon d’Or in 1998 and was a three-time FIFA World Player of the Year. With Kaka’s proposed transfer to Manchester City falling through the cracks, Zidane remains the most expensive player of all time, transferring to Real Madrid from Juventus for £46 million.

His temper, obviously, cost him dearly, and his sending off in the World Cup Final was hardly the first time he saw red during his career (both literally and figuratively). He was sent off 14 times during his career, including an ugly incident in the 1998 World Cup where he stomped on a Saudi Arabian player’s chest. His two-match ban got him back in time for the Quarter Finals, though, but it cost him a chance at the Golden Ball. Plus, there was the embarrassing scene in 2006, where he finally did win the Golden Ball, but was sent off in the World Cup Final after headbutting Marco Materazzi. Still, just because he didn’t have a fairy tale ending, it doesn’t make him any less of a legend.

Football Legends - Johan Cruijff


NETHERLANDS
1964-1984
Ajax (1964-1973, 1981-1983)
Barcelona (1973-1978)
Los Angeles Aztecs (1979-1980)
Washington Diplomats (1980-1981)
Levante (1981)
Feyenoord (1983-1984)

Known as “Pythagoras in Boots” because of his mastery of passing angles, Cruijff was instrumental to the Dutch philosophy of “Total Football.” As such, Cruijff’s position can be difficult to ascertain, since he could score, pass, and defend, and moved all over the pitch, depending on where he was needed. However, his passing and scoring skills made him most effective as an attacking midfielder.

He was a great scorer, as evidenced by his 267 goals in 366 appearance for Ajax. In all, he scored over 400 goals during his career for club and country. As mentioned earlier, he was a tremendous passer, able to see the field unlike most of his peers and deliver accurate passes from anywhere on the pitch. He could dazzle too, as he perfected the “Cruijff Turn” in which he faked a pass or cross, forcing a defender to commit to it, only to drag the ball behind his planted foot and turning away from the flat-footed defender.

At Ajax, he was the leader of one of the greatest teams of all time. He won the treble in 1972, and nearly repeated the task the following season. In all, he won eight Eredivisie titles, five KNVB Cups, and three consecutive European Cups from 1971-1973. He added a Liga title while with Barcelona to his trophy cabinet, and won a Eredivisie title with Feyenoord. He also racked up the individual honors, taking home the Ballon d’Or in 1971, 1973, and 1974.

Despite playing on some extremely talented international teams, Cruijff was never able to win the World Cup. Their best chance to win came in 1974, when Cruijff (who won the Golden Ball that year as the Best Player in the World Cup) led the Netherlands to the World Cup Final against West Germany. The Dutch had sailed through their previous matches, with Cruijff scoring three goals. He set up the opening goal against West Germany in the Finals, drawing a foul inside the box that resulted in a penalty during the 2nd minute of the match. West Germany, however, did a great job man-marking Cryuff, shutting him down with the likes of Franz Beckenbauer, Berti Vogts, and others.

After retiring, Cruijff became a successful manager, winning two KNVB Cups and a Cup Winners’ Cup with Ajax and four consecutive La Liga crowns while with Barcelona. Despite his often stormy relationship with Ajax (he left for bitter rivals, Feyenoord after a salary dispute and was supposed to join the club as technical director until it fell through at the last minute), he remains a club icon whose number 14 jersey was retired.

Football Legends - George Best


N. IRELAND
1963-1984
Manchester United (1963-1974)
Dunstable Town (loan, 1974)
Stockport County (1975)
Cork Celtic (1975-1976)
Los Angeles Aztecs (1976, 1977-1978, 1978-1979)
Fulham (1976-1977)
Fort Lauderdale Strikers (1978-1979)
Hibernian (1979-1980)
San Jose Earthquakes (1980-1981)
Bournemouth (1983)
Brisbane Lions (1983)
Tobermore United (1984)


With a name like “Best” you had better be able to live up it. George Best did so, and more, during his long career. He was one of the greatest wingers of all time, as his fleet-footed pace and acceleration allowed him to blow by defenders, while his trickery with the ball won him fans and admirers all throughout the world. He was a deadly goal-scorer, putting up an astonishing 138 goals in 361 appearances for Manchester United, and finishing with 204 in his career for both club and country.

His best years were at Old Trafford, where he was surrounded by talented players such as Bobby Charlton and Denis Law. It could have been an even more impressive array of players, as the Munich Air Disaster had occurred five years before Best debuted with the senior team. Best was seen as the replacement for the gifted Duncan Edwards, who had perished in the crash, and Best soon set about making his own legend at Old Trafford. He won two League titles in 1966 and 1967, and in 1968, he had a dream season, winning a European Cup title and being voted European Player of the Year and Football Writers’ Association Footballer of the Year. In the semi-finals of the European Cup that year, United were in danger of going out against Real Madrid, but Best sent a brilliant side-pass to Bill Foulkes after seeing Real Madrid’s defense and realizing that a conventional cross into the box would have been cut out. Foulkes then scored the goal that put United in the Finals, where Best scored the Cup clinching goal against a Benfica team that was led by Portuguese legend, Eusebio.

Despite his brilliance on the pitch, he was never able to lead Northern Ireland to the World Cup. That didn’t diminish his stature in his home country. Neither did his rapid physical decline as a result of decades of hard-living that turned him into a tabloid laughing stock later in his life. In Northern Ireland, they have a saying there that goes: “Maradona: Good. Pele: Better. George Best.” That about sums it up.

Football Legends - Bobby Charlton


ENGLAND
1953-1975
Manchester United (1953-1973)
Preston North End (1973-1974)
Waterford United (1975)

One of the true legends of the game, Sir Bobby Charlton has been blessed with good fortune for his entire life. One of the only players who survived the Munich Air Disaster, Charlton carried the torch for his fallen comrades while providing a bridge to the new group of United players that took the team to success in the mid-60’s.

Charlton was known for his ferocious long-range shot and attacking skills in midfield, and his 249 goals for United remain a club record. He held the record for most club appearances until last season, when Ryan Giggs surpassed him. He was also the most-capped player for England at the time of his retirement, earning 106 caps for his country, and his goalscoring record for England still stands at 49 goals.

Charlton was a winner who experienced tremendous success on the pitch. He won League titles in 1957, 1965, and 1967, and an F.A. Cup title in 1963. He also captained United to its European Cup victory in 1968, and won both the Football Writers’ Association Footballer of the Year award and the Ballon d’Or in 1966.

He was a vital part of the English National Team, and scored both English goals in a 2-1 victory over Eusebio and the Portuguese team in the 1966 Semi-Finals. So dangerous was he, that, in the Finals, West Germany assigned their talismanic sweeper, Franz Beckenbauer, to mark him. Beckenbauer did the job, however Charlton showed his defensive skills and neutralized “Der Kaiser” on the other side of the ball.

Charlton has continued his service to the game, even in retirement. As Manchester United’s goodwill ambassador, his stature within the club has only increased with time. He has also served as an ambassador for English football, helping to promote England’s bids for the 2006 World Cup and the 2012 Olympics.

Bobby Charlton’s life was not snuffed out on that fateful day in Munich, and he has made the most of his second chance, continuing to contribute to the game while commemorating his fallen teammates.

Football Legends - Paolo Maldini


ITALY
1984-present
A.C. Milan

Like his mentor, the great Franco Baresi (see above), Maldini is an AC Milan legend who has played his entire career at the San Siro. Maldini has followed in Baresi’s footsteps in a number of other ways as well. He’s been club skipper, he’s been an inspirational and iconic figure, and most importantly, he’s been a winner. Maldini has won more games than anyone in an A.C. Milan kit, and has a crowded trophy room to boot. He has won seven Scudetti, one Coppa Italia, four Italian Super Cups, and five UEFA Champions League Titles. He was also the first European-based captain to lift the World Club Championship,. In 1994, he became the first defender to win World Soccer’s World Player of the Year award.

He is extremely versatile and has excelled at both left-back and center back during his career. He moved to center back after Baresi retired and has played much of his career for club and country in the heart of the defense. Indeed, the heart metaphor is apt when describing Maldini since he was always the inspirational leader of his team’s backline. He didn’t just use words and emotions to get the job done, though. He also led by example, and his exquisite skills, solid tackling, and guile made him, arguably, the greatest defender in the world during his day. He wasn’t as flashy as his counterpart, Roberto Carlos (see below), but most experts will tell you that he was a much better defender.

Internationally, he remains Italy’s most capped player with 126 appearances. He was skipper for 74 of those appearances, which is also a record. He didn’t win any trophies during his time with the national team, coming closest in 1994 when he was on the Italian squad that finished second to Brazil. He was also a runner-up at Euro 2000, where he came up short against France. Nevertheless, he is one of the most beloved players in Italian history and a true icon.

Football Legends - Franco Baresi


Franco Baresi

ITALY
1977-1997
AC Milan

Like Beckenbauer, Baresi played the libero role to perfection during his two decades at Milan. Unlike Beckenbauer, Baresi concentrated more on his defensive duties, holding down the middle of field and easily dispossessing anyone who dared enter the penalty area while he was standing guard. That’s not to say he didn’t go forward, because he did. However, his primary role was to protect his keeper and win the ball, which he did with amazing success.

Baresi had a phenomenally successful career with Milan, winning six Scudetti, three European Cups, and four Italian Supercups. As an international player, he was on the 1982 World Cup winning squad, but at 22 years old, he was an unused substitute behind Italian great Gaetano Scirea (see above), albeit one that left with a Winner’s Medal. He missed the 1986 World Cup, and didn’t make his debut until 1990, when Italy hosted the tournament. With high expectations, Italy came up short, losing to Argentina in the Semi-Finals, but were able to finish third after defeating England in the consolation match. He was the skipper for the 1994 team that lost to Brazil in the Finals, and was one of the players who missed in the penalty shootout, although he did not face nearly as much criticism as his teammate, Roberto Baggio, whose miss clinched the Cup for Brazil. Throughout his career, Baresi earned 81 caps, a number that would have surely been in the triple-digits if he hadn’t been competing with Scirea.

Ultimately, his greatest influence can be seen through his protégé, Paolo Maldini. Baresi spent a lot of time tutoring his younger charge while the two of them played together at Milan. As such, when Baresi retired, he turned over his captain’s armband to Maldini in a memorable moment involving the clubs current and future icons. Only Maldini has won more matches, made more appearances, and won more trophies with the club than Baresi.

Football Legends - Franz Beckenbauer


GERMANY
1964-1983
Bayern Munich (1964-1977)
New York Cosmos (1977-1980, 1983)
Hamburger SV (1980-1982)

“Der Kaiser” is generally regarded as the greatest German footballer of all time, and with good reason. No one was better at winning trophies than Beckenbauer. He became the driving force of some of the greatest teams in football history while playing with Bayern Munich, combining with Sepp Maier and Gerd Muller to win four Bundesliga crowns, four DFB Cups, one Cup Winners Cup, and, most notably, three straight European Cups from 1973-1976. His winning ways continued after he left Bayern Munich, winning a Bundesliga title with Hamburger in 1982, and winning three NASL Championships with the Cosmos.

As successful as he was in domestic competition, he was even better on the international scene. Beckenbauer captained the West German side to the 1972 European Championships and the 1974 World Cup. During the 1974 World Cup Final, he had, arguably, his finest moment, as his West Germans were big underdogs against the Johan Cruijff and the “Total Football” Dutch juggernaut. However Beckenbauer, Berti Vogts, and other German defenders man-marked Cruijff so well that the Netherlands managed only one goal on a penalty shot.

Beckenbauer wasn’t just a winner. He was a pioneer that changed the way the game was played. Not content to sit back and concentrate on defense when he had great playmaking and attacking skills, or to stay in midfield when he had such excellent defensive instincts, he became the first great sweeper (“libero”) in the game.

Beckenbauer remains a dominant figure in German football. He won the 1990 World Cup as a manager, guiding the very last West German squad to glory. He also won a Bundesliga title as Bayern Munich’s manager, and picked up a UEFA Cup title to boot. He’s currently the Chairman of Bayern Munich, as well as the Vice-President of the DFB. He was instrumental in bringing the World Cup to Germany in 2006, and frequently makes headlines for criticizing various German players and managers. Hey, when you’ve won as much as he has, I guess you’ve earned that right.

Most notably, Beckenbauer’s success as a libero, prompted many teams to look for their own version of “Der Kaiser.” Some teams, like Italy with Scirea and Baresi or the later-day German squad with Matthaus succeeded. But, by and large, most teams found out that there was only one Beckenbauer.

Football Legends - Ricardo Zamora


SPAIN

Espanyol (1916-1919, 1922-1930)
Barcelona (1919-1922)
Real Madrid (1930-1936)
OGC Nice (1936-1938)

With his matinee idol good looks (Marca once referred to him being “as famous as Garbo, and better looking”) and Beckham-esque sense of style (he wore a cloth cap and a white polo-neck jumper, which he claimed protected him from the sun and from opposing players, to say nothing of the Fashion Police), “El Divino” is considered to be the first football superstar in Spanish history. He won five Copa Del Rey championships, five Catalan Club Championships (which existed before La Liga), and two La Liga titles. He wasn’t all style over substance, though. He was known for his toughness and bravery, frequently playing despite severe injuries. He is, perhaps, most famous for playing with a broken sternum against England, a match in which Spain became the first team from outside the British Isles to defeat England.

He was a member of the very first Spanish international squad and won a silver medal at the 1920 Olympics. He was also the starting goalkeeper for the Spanish side that went all the way to the Quarterfinals in the 1934 World Cup. He was Spain’s most capped player for 38 years before being surpassed by José Ángel Iribar.

He was every bit as controversial as he was accomplished. Like Lev Yashin (see below), he enjoyed drinking and smoking, and was known to smoke up to three packs of cigarettes a day (good thing he didn’t play in the midfield). He was sent off in the 1920 Olympics for punching an Italian player, and was arrested on his way home from the Olympic games for trying to smuggle Cuban cigars into Spain. He tried to conceal part of his signing-on fee with Espanyol so that he wouldn’t have to pay taxes on it, and was suspended for a year.

Politically, he was one of the rare Spanish players of that era who found favor with both Nationalists and Republicans. He played for the Catalan National Team, but controversially transferred to Real Madrid, which was the preferred side of Francisco Franco, the Generalissimo who tried to suppress Catalan Nationalism upon becoming dictator of Spain. He was given a medal by the Republican government, which obviously didn’t take because he was later captured by the Republican Army during the Spanish Civil War, and was rumored to have been killed. He managed to escape to France, where he played his last two years with OGC Nice before returning to Spain, where he received a medal from Franco.

Despite his shifting political allegiances, he is still revered in Spanish football. The award for outstanding goalkeeper in La Liga is named the Ricardo Zamora Trophy.

Aston Villa, what is your problem?

It was the 88th minute of the game and Aston Villa were 2 goals up against Stoke City. Nobody saw a comeback coming, probably not even Stoke. But out of the blue the Potters popped up with 2 goals and drew the game.

This all took place at Villa Park on Sunday in what turned out to be MUCH more than ‘just another game’.

Before it had even kicked off, Villa manager Martin O’Neill made a big spectacle out of the game with his midweek antics over in Moscow. O’Neill dropped no fewer than 8 first team players for the trip to Russia, playing a shadow side, with the motivation behind it being to rest the key players for the Stoke (and upcoming Man City) game. In doing so, he put a huge onus on Villa to get all 3 points against Stoke.

Having been eliminated from all cup competitions, Villa now had all their eggs in the ‘top four’ basket and with Arsenal drawing a blank yet again, the chance to open up an 8 point lead was there for the taking.

Martin O’Neill made up no lies for his UEFA Cup selection policy, preferring to be totally honest about Villa’s priorities, that being the push to reach the Champions League qualifying places. The fewer games will no doubt help, but the fans are not happy to have another season of silverware chasing disappear up the swanny in such a fashion.

It’s been a tough old fortnight for the second-city side; losing to Everton in the FA Cup, losing to CSKA Moscow over two legs, losing to a rejuvinated Chelsea and finally losing a 2-goal lead to struggling Stoke.

So what was the problem against Stoke?

Martin O’Neill has suggested over-confidence caused the dramatic downfall in the dying minutes, but for me the big problem for Villa is one that has been ringing round the club for a long time, and inspired so much speculation in the run up to January, linking Villa with just about every striker in the game; they don’t score enough.

You’d think that being the 5th top scorers in the league and averaging more than 1.5 goals per game might be enough to keep a Villa fan (like me) happy, but if there was a tally of the amount of attacks they have had, you’d see how many opportunities they fail to convert. Villa have dominated many games and failed to score in them, take for example the Wigan and Fulham games. Villa have won a lot of games this season by constant bombardment, but teams like Man Utd or Chelsea would’ve won these games with 4 or 5 goals after so much attacking play, whereas Villa end up with 1 or 2.

For the vast majority of the game (certainly in the first half) the ball was in Stoke’s half but Villa failed to make enough chances count. Gabriel Agbonlahor was particularly off the boil, missing 2 easy chances and generally not being a strong enough presence. January saw the arrival of Emile Heskey, but he is most dangerous when the ball is played through the middle and Villa are more of a flanks team.

Ashley Young is constantly getting down the wing and putting in crosses, even though Villa are not getting to the headers, but still time after time they go wide through Young and Milner, then cross it… and chance over. Really they should either cut inside more or play the ball along the floor. Very few Villa goals actually come from crosses.

What is needed is a poacher. A Ruud Van Nistelrooy / Michael Owen type. Someone who does very little else but score. Or a great headerer of the ball, would also be great for Villa, someone like Shearer or more recently, Tim Cahill or Ronaldo. A player who loses his marker, wins the header and knows where to direct it. With a strong headerer (is that a even a word?!), Villa could be thrashing teams week in week out.

And a quick word on the full back situation

I’m now left wandering why O’Neill continues to play Cuellar at right back, when he hasn’t performed well there for a string of games. The Spaniard could do a better job at centre back, with both Gardner and Reo-Coker available as sit-in right backs or even, god forbid, he could play the clubs ‘actual’ right back at right back. Nicky Shorey has shown a definite return towards the quality that made O’Neill sign him and would jump at the chance of playing left back, allowing Luke Young to switch over to his desired flank.