Abdul Razzaq CelebratingThere’s absolutely nothing wrong with one-day cricket as the matches in the format in 2010 showed us. It’s just a matter of context and giving the bowlers more power

By the second half of 1976, Led Zeppelin’s time was up. Punks were slashing out – literally and musically – a new future. Zeppelin were loud but overblown, too intricate, too earnestly immersed in the craft and too long; dinosaurs, Johnny Rotten from the Sex Pistols called them.

Punk was a reaction: short, sharp, quick, everything Led Zeppelin and their type weren’t. What’s more, punk’s breed was loudly and brashly dismissive of what had gone before, as if there was no point to it and that the world had been built only after their arrival and on three chords alone. The world turns and society breathes on these kinds of passings.

A similar air breezes through cricket just now. A new fad has arrived and worked its way into the mainstream. Twenty20 is cricket’s new poster boy. Advocates trumpet its virtues and do so at the expense of the old order, the 50-over game, which some boards refuse to play domestically; some have even started cutting its length further. Some want to bastardise it so it isn’t the same game at all. Great players, players who have lit up the format, moan about it. It’s too long and too predictable and the middle is too flabby. To some there is no longer any point to the longer game, so much so that sometimes you begin to wonder why it ever existed in the first place.

I have enjoyed watching ODIs over this last year or so, even if that sounds uneasily like a confession. There were too many of them – nearly 150 in 2010 alone – but I seem able to remember more ODI moments and games from this period than I have done for some time.

The Asia Cup, ever the byword for bloated pointlessness, had some fine, tense matches. England’s series win over Australia in midsummer carried within it electricity and meaning and outstanding cricket. Pakistan’s loss to England two months later had all of that, only multiplied a few times over. In between, Bangladesh found time to sneak a thriller over England.

Then, over six days in October and November, in the Middle East and Australia, there came five games that hammered home precisely why ODIs are meant to be. Three, between Pakistan and South Africa, and Australia and Sri Lanka, were decided with only a wicket to spare. Another was settled by two runs. All went to the wire, turned this way and that, and went further.

And quite apart from the significance of Bangladesh swamping New Zealand 4-0, it simply added to the atmosphere that three of those wins were by 10 runs or fewer. Two close games between India and South Africa in January, meanwhile, lit up a beautiful, meaningful five-game series. Who will ever forget that at nearly 40, the ODI produced a first just last year, a double-hundred?

I have no reason to believe I am alone in enjoying these moments. The majority of these matches were watched in sold-out stadiums. TV ratings were healthy. Even in 2009, when the sniping against the 50-over game was at its sharpest, the Australia-England series, and then Australia’s subsequent seven-match slug-fest with India, were mostly sold out. TRPs for the latter contest were, on average, five times those for the inaugural Champions League.

It’s never wise to give too much credence to what TV and marketing men say, but even a casual glance suggests that the current hand-wringing – to which this piece no doubt contributes – might be a little overdone. Cricket Australia and the ECB have carried out a gazillion consumer researches – are we selling biscuits? – that apparently prove the ODI is dead. Accordingly one of those boards has dumped 50 overs in favour of a 40-over domestic format, and the other has tried to split the format to make it into a Test. Yet in January the two got together to play exactly the same dead, 50-overs-in-one-innings, matches. Seven of them and no matter that it was, for all purposes, a whitewash. The response from Australian players, in fact, has been decidedly mixed to a split format. Beyond some journalists, then, who really even wants the format dead?

What Cricket Australia’s research most likely shows is not that ODIs are hated, but something we’ve always known: that crap contests between mismatched teams, or meaningless ones in a series that has already been decided, are hated. Unsurprisingly the results came soon after Australia had won nine out of 10 ODIs in their last (2009-10) summer against a dysfunctional Pakistan and a clueless West Indies. One game was washed out. It was the kind of viewing designed to push people to reality TV. The original and best tri-series, played every summer in Australia, and provider of so many of the ODI’s finest moments, was dumped for this.

This last year or so actually was not a revival of the format so much as a reminder of what is good about it. One of cricket’s greatest joys is the many paces the narrative moves at. A half-hour spell of wickets, an hour’s burst of runs, two sessions of nothing in particular sandwiching an adrenaline-fuelled one, 15 overs of single-hunting, 10 overs of death bowling and slogs; this is life, of moods within moods.

Like shy teens, cricket takes time to fully express itself. An innings can be about an agenda being set. It can be about reconstruction. It can be about stealth and accumulation. A batsman can defend and attack in one hand, a bowler can seek wickets or stem the flow of runs in one spell. Indeed, one of the peeves of Twenty20 is how it reduces a fast bowler essentially to a means of saving runs; even the slower ball, once a wicket-taking piece of classy deception, is now a stale staple in Twenty20, to stop boundaries being hit.

Fifty overs still provides a broad enough canvas, and an examination prolonged enough of any player, to produce or confirm quality and greatness. It is long enough that, if there is a twist, it is felt that much more. The eighth-wicket stand between Lasith Malinga and Angelo Mathews that shocked Australia recently, or Abdul Razzaq’s heist against South Africa in Abu Dhabi at the same time, are tales that cannot be told in any other format. They are unique in their contribution to the tapestry of the game. Attempts to keep alive the possibility of them recurring cannot so readily be shunted aside.

Not all of it, of course, glitters. There are issues. Led Zeppelin didn’t just fade out because of punk; they were combusting internally.

Everyone knows there are too many ODIs played, far too many of which lack much context and meaning. This has been a decade of cricket excess in many ways, though nothing captures it better than 10 years of seven-match ODI contests and the week-long tri-series forgotten quicker than last year’s Pop Idol. They make money for broadcasters, of course, but now that Twenty20s serve that purpose as well, can some harmony not be reached? In this light, Ricky Ponting’s plea to kill dead-rubber games, as is done in some US sports, is an absolute winner.

The ICC, for once, is doing something about it, though in a fashion typical of a body representing nine vastly unequal governing boards. A rolling four-year ODI league is to become part of the Future Tours Program after the 2011 World Cup, at the end of which a league champion will be proclaimed. If it doesn’t come with some kind of imposed standardisation, to ensure all sides play each other an equal number of times, home and away, it will be skewed and redundant.

There is also talk of removing the long-mishandled, little-loved Champions Trophy. Instead, by getting rid of Associates, the World Cup from 2015 onwards – still pencilled in as a 50-overs contest incidentally – is trying to become more like what the Champions Trophy should have been. Perhaps the answer is in the 1992 World Cup. Not much other than the rain rule was wrong with it; certainly not the format of all sides playing each other once and the top four going through.

Questions of structural change, meanwhile, are actually questions of perception and taste. To many the middle overs of an ODI are like the dark ages without the violence. To others appeal the changes of pace, the shining of a light on running as a skill. Still, for the ones who just miss the boundaries, the ICC has added the batting Powerplay, and if nothing else this has at least brought the prospect of unpredictability to a phase that is often formulaic. Yet in the struggle to utilise fully the Powerplay (how many players have refused to use it when set, only for it to be called once one batsman has gone and overs are running out anyway?) the basic defensiveness of the modern-day captain and player has also been exposed. It is difficult to argue with Ian Chappell on most issues, but more so on the point that captains themselves must bring more adventure to these periods, as well as to the game itself.

Other matters should be more straightforward. ODIs must become more like Tests, as Michael Atherton has argued, in the equality with which bat meets ball. Go easy on the leg-side wides. Allow more bouncers. Don’t restrict all bowlers to 10 overs. Bring back one ball at each end. There never was, and there still isn’t, a sound reason to prolong the emasculation of bowlers.

Pitches need to be produced where batsmen have to graft to profit. The best games this last year, and historically, have been where 260 meets 250, not 350 meets 300. Two Australia-South Africa games well illustrate the point: neither the 1999 World Cup semi-final at Edgbaston or the 2006 Wanderers 434 chase will be easily forgotten, but the better game? Easily the former, where bowlers had as much say as batsmen.

It is to the ODI’s misfortune that, like Af-Pak, it is hyphenated. An ODI cannot now be assessed without a Twenty20, and the benefit of one must necessarily be to the detriment of the other. In a sense the ODI has always been this way. Before Twenty20, an ODI wasn’t a Test.

It has rarely been the format that has been played purely for the sake of playing. It is the format where, other than making money, cricket has gone to test theories and ideas and tinker: cutting the number of overs, colouring kits and changing the colour of the ball, playing at night, exploring new lands and neutral territory, pulling in new countries, and much, much else. Yet this period has reminded this writer at least that an ODI can be enjoyed and experienced purely as an ODI. Why can cricket simply not make peace with its three representations, side by side, unique and varied in the challenges they put to players and the pleasure they bring to viewers?

Led Zeppelin never fully recovered from the onslaught of punk. They sputtered on, changed and diminished. A member died, Jimmy Page and Robert Plant fell out. Now they get together occasionally and sound like a bad cover band of themselves. Punk finished them then, but really, for posterity, it did no such thing.

[Via Cricinfo]

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Lionel Messi: The world's best is ready to face Arsenal.

Lionel Messi: The world's best is ready to face Arsenal.

If Arsene Wenger were asked to paint a portrait of his perfect footballer, he would put down his vision of a 5′ 7″ Argentine, sporting a cheeky boyish grin to distinguish him from the host of similarly diminutive stars at his own club.

While the Arsenal manager will offer a stout defence of the likes of Abou Diaby, Alex Song, Nicklas Bendtner and Manuel Almunia when any cynic questions them, the one player he would covet more than any other is unlikely to ever cross his path with anything less than menacing intent. This will be the case once again on Wednesday night.

Messi’s four-goal performance in last season’s quarter-final demolition of the Gunners sent shockwaves through Wenger’s dressing room and, such was the scale of their massacre at the Camp Nou, many questioned whether Arsenal could recover from their battering.

Their revival this season has been commendable, but they now they come face-to-face with the man who took them apart last season.

“It will be too much to ask for something similar to my last performance in these next games against Arsenal, but I always try to find a way to get better and that has to be the target this time,” Messi says. “The Arsenal match last year was very special for me. The comments that were pushed in my direction from some of the most famous names in the sport after that victory meant it was one of the greatest moments in my career so far.

“It’s not often you score four goals in any game, but to do it in a Champions League quarter-final against a top side and in a game where the side needed something after we found ourselves in a difficult position – it was amazing for me.

“I love to watch Arsenal on television because the way they play the game is very like Barcelona, but we feel we are better at this gameplan than everyone else. Now we have to prove it in the games that really matter.”

As a quartet of scintillating goals from the virtuoso nicknamed the ‘The Flea’ put Arsenal to the sword in no uncertain terms last year, Wenger was left to lick his wounds as his side were soundly beaten.

“It’s not so easy for us when we play teams who have a different mindset, like Chelsea or Inter Milan, because they have the intention of trying to stop us rather than playing a game that is more attractive for the spectators to enjoy,” Messi continues. “These are the kind of teams that are tougher for us to play our best against, but Arsenal and Manchester United want to try to win matches using the sort of method we employ at Barca and that means you can have a good game against them.

“We will not take Arsenal lightly for one minute, as they showed in the two matches against us last season that they can be dangerous opponents if we lose our concentration for a moment.

Lionel Messi, Manuel Almunia

Lionel Messi was stunning in the 4-1 win against Arsenal

“There was a moment in the last tie when they scored at the Camp Nou and we needed to respond very quickly and that will serve as a reminder that Arsenal are dangerous opponents. We must be confident if not arrogant that we can succeed.”

Pep Guardiola’s Barcelona dream team are playing on a different stratosphere to the rest in European football right now, and it appears their domination has done nothing to foster feelings of complacency.

“You cannot allow your desire to be a winner to be diminished by achieving success before and I believe there is room for improvement in every sportsman,” he adds. “I’m only 23 and there is no way I believe the end of my development is coming soon. I have many years to get better and better and that has to be my ambition. The day you think there is no improvements to be made is a sad one for any player.

“Every year has seen me make improvements to my game so far and that should continue for some time yet, with games like the one against Arsenal the kind of moments you want to create again and again.

“I’m lucky to be part of a team who help to make me look good and they deserve as much of the credit for my success as I do for the hard work we have all put in on the training ground.

“Setbacks like the one we suffered in last season’s Champions League against Inter Milan are good for us because they inspire you to do better the next time. Well, the moment is here now and we have to rise to the challenge and try to reach this year’s final.”

[Via Soccernet]

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Cadillac Logo

The Cadillac CTS-V Coupe is all kinds of badass. Yes, it’s archaic, but we can’t help but love a big-honkin’ American car with 556 horsepower and enough torque to peel pavement. The guys responsible for that chiseled block of awesome are going racing.

Cadillac announced Monday it’s returning to the Sports Car Club of America World Challenge next year. GM’s luxury marque will field two teams in the GT class, both running cars based on the CTS-V Coupe. The AWC is North America’s top production-based race-car series; Cadillac captured the manufacturer’s championship in the GT class in 2005 and 2007 and took the driver’s championship in 2005.

Left to right: Vinnie Ciaravino, Greg Zeigler and Mike West build one of two Cadillac CTS-V race cars at Pratt & Miller. A rendering of the car and the obligatory video below.

“Returning to racing in the SCCA World Challenge is a great way to demonstrate the performance and capability of the CTS-V Coupe,” Don Butler, vice president for Cadillac marketing, said in a statement. “The race cars in this series are production-based, which allows us to validate our performance against the best of our competitors on the track, and not just the showroom.”

Johnny O’Connell, a three-time GT1 champion in the America Le Mans Series, and Andy Pilgrim, who won the 2005 SCCA World Challenge GT class in a Cadillac, will drive the cars. Cadillac is working with engineering firm Pratt & Miller, which specializes in motor racing, to develop them. Of course the cars will feature mods and equipment required for racing, but Cadillac wants to keep the cars as original as possible.

“The series will become a key test bed for Cadillac,” Jim Campbell, GM vice president for performance vehicles and motor sports, said in a statement. “We anticipate using what we learn on the racetrack to ensure the V-Series stays on the cutting edge of performance.”

The cars’ performance remains to be seen, but we love the Mondrianesque livery.



Image: Here’s what the car will look like when it hits the grid.
Courtesy General Motors


Video

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Danish international goalkeeper Anders LindegaardManchester United has signed Danish international goalkeeper Anders Lindegaard on a 3½ year deal for an undisclosed fee after reaching an agreement with the players former club Aalesunds FK, reports the premier league club’s official website ManUtd.com.

According to the official release, “Personal terms have been agreed with the player, who passed a medical in Manchester. Anders will train with United during December, but will be ineligible to play until the transfer window opens in January 2011.”

Sir Alex Ferguson said: “Anders is one of the brightest young keepers in the game.  The challenge at Manchester United is always to look to the future and in Anders, we have signed a goalkeeper of great presence and even more promise.  Having the time to train with him before he is registered will be an important period for him – almost like a pre season to get him integrated with the other players.”

Anders Lindegaard said: “Joining Manchester United is a dream come true for me.  The Club is such an institution in Denmark, it’s an honour to come here.  I’m looking forward to playing and training alongside some of the great players in football today.  I can’t wait to be part of this team and to make my contribution to keeping the team at the top of the game.”

I hope Sir Alex has made a right call this time as the Red Devils desperately need a perfect replacement for the Dutch star Edwin Van der Sar. Experts believe United has to have one of the best goalkeepers around if they are to win more trophies and titles in the future.

This is a post from Bits Station that bring latest Football and Sports News and Reviews.

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Assistant managers can fade into the background. They are the men cut out of the close-up and ignored in song, rarely eulogised or vilified. Ultimate accountability lies elsewhere. And yet Manchester’s footballing community has recently received a reminder of the impact they can have.

Carlos Queiroz Embrace

The death of Malcolm Allison, half of Manchester City’s greatest management team, brought a deluge of tributes. Along with Brian Clough’s invaluable ally, Peter Taylor, Allison ranks among English football’s greatest sidekicks. But so, arguably, does a more recent second-in-command to grace the city’s dugouts.

And perhaps the recent outbreak of nostalgia among his rivals will prompt Sir Alex Ferguson to revisit his own history. As the ongoing excellence of Ryan Giggs and Paul Scholes illustrates, Ferguson has looked to the past for renewal before and, following his sacking by Portugal, Carlos Queiroz is available again. Like Allison and Taylor, he appears doomed to be deemed a far greater coach than manager, but Ferguson’s esteem for his old ally remains high.

The Scot served as a character witness for his former assistant when Queiroz was accused of disrupting an anti-doping test. He is serving a six-month suspension in his homeland, but, while it represents a black mark on his CV, that would not preclude him from working in England.

Moreover, should his two previous spells at Old Trafford provide an accurate guide, there are reasons to believe that he could provide a rather cheaper tonic than some of the many mooted transfer targets. As the move for Bebe shows, Ferguson has continued to tap into Queiroz’s knowledge of the Portuguese and Brazilian markets.

While his judgment is not impeccable, as those who remember Manucho’s inglorious spell at Old Trafford can testify, his advice has brought two notable coups: Cristiano Ronaldo, United’s outstanding signing of the last decade and a man who produced a £68 million profit, and Nani, who is starting to deliver the blend of fancy-footed flair and fine finishing that became his compatriot’s hallmark.

It is a sign that Ferguson heeds Queiroz’s counsel. Mike Phelan and Rene Meulenstein, his current subordinates, are not men of the same stature and, given the pedigree of some of the 68-year-old’s other adjutants – Walter Smith, Steve McClaren, Brian Kidd and Archie Knox – it is hard not to view the current crop as their inferiors.

Bouncing ideas off a former Real Madrid manager, who has led three different national teams, is a more attractive option than sharing them with a coach who comes across as a serial yes-man. Given Ferguson’s enormous achievements and tradition of intimidation, does Phelan have the credibility to question his decisions?

In contrast, Ferguson and Queiroz were even described as co-managers, though it is hard to imagine the former sharing top billing with anyone. That United’s sometimes erratic squad rotation tended to operate rather more smoothly during Queiroz’s four-year second spell at Old Trafford is an indication that some of the stranger ideas were never implemented.

Queiroz may not have the same incendiary willpower that Ferguson possesses – few do – but there are indications they complemented one another well. The Portuguese has the linguistic skills to communicate with those who find Glaswegian an unintelligible dialect. He is also more of a hands-on coach than Ferguson and, as a tactician, is credited with persuading the older man that United required an evolution from their traditional 4-4-2 to a three-man central midfield to triumph in Europe. It rendered the 2008 Champions League victory possible (even if the final was a match United began by reverting to 4-4-2).

A further appeal for a club who have been uncharacteristically ragged at the back this season is a reputation as a defensive strategist. The partnership of Rio Ferdinand and Nemanja Vidic was united and drilled in his time in Manchester and his final season coincided with the best defensive record in the club’s history, when a mere 22 goals were conceded.

Carlos Queiroz

While his time with his homeland included one or two embarrassing displays – notably the 6-2 defeat to Brazil – they were separated by a run of 26 games that included 22 clean sheets. Portugal’s may well have been the best defence in the World Cup and a cash-conscious club should be aware it is often cheaper to construct the most resilient rearguard than the most potent attack.

So, with Ferdinand’s body creaking and Edwin van der Sar’s career (logically) in its final furlong, it could be an apposite time to enlist a coach who could fashion a new-look defence. Because while Queiroz’s influence appeared to irritate Roy Keane, among others, in the traumatic autumn of 2005, the consensus is that it was hugely beneficial.

And now, in the wake of the reassurances about the club’s ambition that Wayne Rooney has received and the supposedly sizeable budget Ferguson has at his disposal, speculation rages about supposed signings next summer. Another superstar would be a welcome addition, yet the most significant could be reuniting Ferguson with his favoured right-hand man.

[Via Soccernet]

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In light of English football’s most stunning transfer story since Kevin Keegan was on the steps at St James’ Park explaining his decision to sell Andy Cole to Manchester United, Alex Dunn reflects on who Sir Alex Ferguson might have his eye on if indeed Wayne Rooney quits the club he was swearing his devotion to just months ago.

Karim Benzema

It’s one of football’s most open secrets that Ferguson is a fan of the mercurial Frenchman having tried to sign him prior to his move from Lyon to Real Madrid in 2009. Benzema may just now be thinking he should have plumped for Old Trafford over the Bernabeu, with his time in Spain seeing him struggle to find anything like his top form as too often he has cut a forlorn figure on the sidelines. A frosty relationship with Jose Mourinho has thawed in recent weeks but with the Portuguese having said earlier in the season ‘If it was just for you I would make training at midday because you arrived at 10 o’clock half asleep and then by 11 you are already sleeping again’, it’s fair to say the Special One has his reservations. It is expected that Real will attempt to use Benzema as a makeweight in any potential deal for Rooney, with another long-term Ferguson target Lassana Diarra another Madrid misfit who could be used as bait. On his day, as 43 goals in 112 appearances for Lyon attests, Benzema can be a force of nature. At 22 he also fits in with United’s long-term recruitment strategy and while he may not be quite the finished product, he’s certainly further into his development than the likes of Javier Hernandez and Bebe.

Fernando Torres

Just yesterday Roy Hodgson conceded he fears losing his talisman, with Torres’ body language all season suggesting his Anfield love affair could be drawing to a close. Upon his appointment Hodgson’s first job was to convince the Spaniard that the future is rosy on Merseyside. Doing his best Pinocchio impression Uncle Woy did just that but the proof is in the pudding as Liverpool sit second from bottom in the table. Unless new owner John W Henry spends outlandishly in January, which seems highly unlikely, Torres would be loath to acquiesce to another season devoid of UEFA Champions League football. Chelsea has always been mooted as his likely next port of call but if Roman Abramovich opens the coffers for Rooney it could be that United nip in for Torres, who might just fancy the idea of staying in the North West where he’s settled. The prospect of Torres in a United shirt would turn the stomach of any Liverpool supporter. Probably about as much as Rooney wearing sky blue would for United fans.

Diego Forlan

If Rooney goes in January it could be that Ferguson decides it’s a case of ‘better the devil you know’ and turns to old boy Forlan. The Uruguayan wasn’t quite Garry Birtles during his two-year sojourn in Manchester but just ten goals from 63 appearances is testimony to his struggles. He was always a popular figure though and given what he has achieved since leaving United any return would not be based on sentiment. His goalscoring figures at subsequent spells with Villarreal (54 in 106) and Atletico Madrid (69 in 106) are phenomenal, while his performances in South Africa over the summer saw him crowned the World Cup’s outstanding individual. The likeable South American has made no secret of his desire to have another crack at the Premier League and has previously been linked to Tottenham. However, if Fergie came calling he’d probably walk barefoot from the Spanish capital for a second chance with the dethroned champions.

Luis Suarez

Forlan’s Uruguay team-mate Suarez is another reportedly on Ferguson’s radar. The 23-year-old had a bright if unspectacular World Cup but his form for Ajax since joining them in 2007 for €7.5million from Groningen has been nothing short of spectacular. His first two seasons in Amsterdam yielded goal returns of 22 and 28 respectively, before last term he went on the rampage in plundering 49 goals from 48 appearances. It’s fair to say this kid knows where the back of the net is. Playing off the shoulder he would complement Dimitar Berbatov’s predilection to meander wherever he fancies, but Ferguson may feel he is too similar to Hernandez. The Eredivisie is not the strongest of leagues either, with Chelsea still haunted by the ghost of Mateja Kezman, who had a similar goalscoring record to Suarez while at PSV Eindhoven before flopping miserably in West London.

Kaka

If the Glazers wanted to pull off the ultimate PR stunt and push those gold and green scarves to the back of supporters’ wardrobes then they could do worse than weigh up a move for Kaka. The Brazilian has endured a miserable time since becoming a Galactico at Real Madrid, with Mourinho unconvinced as to where he fits into his master plan. The talk is that Real are willing to listen to offers for the 28-year-old who cost them a cool £56million in 2009. Manchester City failed in an ill-fated bid to sign him prior to that but if a return to Italy is ruled out due to monetary restraints at Serie A’s top clubs, then a switch to the Premier League could appeal. It seems unlikely the money men at Old Trafford would sanction a move for the one-time World and European Player of the Year but if United are to prove wrong Rooney’s view that the club lacks ambition, then a bid for Kaka would be just the ticket.

Sergio Aguero

Atletico Madrid’s Aguero is another who would capture the imagination of the supporters if United were to land him. The son-in-law of Diego Maradona has a buy-out clause of around £55million but with Atletico in a perilous financial position, it’s unlikely United would have to pay quite that much for a player who contrary to speculation has not signed a new deal at Vicente Calderon. At just 22 and in the mould of a pugnacious conjurer, a la Rooney, Aguero certainly ticks all the right boxes. Aguero’s agent Jose Segui admits there is interest from Premier League clubs but he claims ‘Kun’ wants to stay in the Spanish capital, insisting the player is ‘happy in Madrid and happy in Spain’.

Other possible candidates…..Edin Dzeko, Alexandre Pato, Gonzalo Higuain, Darren Bent, Wesley Sneijder.

Who would you like to see lining up at Old Trafford if Rooney leaves? Have we got the right names on our list or is there an obvious candidate we’ve missed out?

[Via Sky Sports]

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The latest development to shock Manchester United fans: Wayne Rooney is contemplating a move to hated rivals Manchester City!

The England star has been the subject of transfer rumours recently after reports revealed that he had not signed a deal to extend his current contract at Old Trafford yet.

Rooney’s life has been in turmoil since revelations about his sexual indiscretions came to light. In addition, the striker’s relationship with United boss Sir Alex Ferguson had grown frosty since August this year, when the striker was caught in public smoking and urinating with little care for decorum.

Most recently, it was revealed that the player had informed his current employers that he was not going to sign a new contract to extend his stay with the Red Devils.

According to reports from the Guardian, however, what started out as a bad week for Manchester United fans could turn out to be even worse as Rooney is planning a even greater betrayal- crossing over to the Blue side of Manchester to turn out for hated rivals Manchester City!

The England star is looking at following ex-United star Carlos Tevez in crossing one of the biggest tribal divides in world football, despite the potential brickbats and criticisms that are certain to come his way.

Carlos Ancelotti has already publicly declared his interest in Rooney if the striker was keen to don the colours of Chelsea.

Ancelotti said: “We’d have to wait to see if Wayne Rooney really wants to leave Manchester United.

“Secondly, whether United would really want to sell him.

“And thirdly, if Rooney’s on the market it would not just be Chelsea interested, but a lot of teams.”

However, the 24-year-old is acutely aware that this could be the last chance to wrangle the biggest salary package he will ever command, and given the comparable wealth of the oil-sheik owners of the Citizens, Rooney is aware that in an austure transfer market, they could be the biggest player on the scene.

Rooney has reportedly told team-mates that City, not Real Madrid or Barcelona, is a more realistic move for him, given his current family issues. His wife, Colleen, has a 12-year-old sister who is suffering from a brain disorder, Retts syndrome, and will not be keen for a move abroad that will keep them apart.

What could make this move happen is the fact that Brain Marwood, the Citizen’s football administrator, is well-acquainted with Rooney’s adviser, Paul Stretford, as well as the player himself, as Marwood used to work for Nike, one of the player’s major sponsors.

Although previous reports have indicated that UEFA’s new financial fair-play rules could stifle any move for Rooney by the Citizens, the club believe that there are loopholes to be used, as well as players that could be sold, like Roque Santa Cruz and Craig Bellamy, to make space for the England star.

“We (The Manchester City hierarchy) hadn’t discussed signing Rooney until the last week because we never thought he would be available, just like we have never discussed signing Lionel Messi from Barcelona,” according to a quote from the Guardian.

“Now we know he wants to leave United we’re obviously going to monitor it closely.”

However, according to reports from the Sun, Real are also keen to get the England star.

Real’s Director-General Jorge Valdano said : “Our problem is who to get rid of if Wayne Rooney comes here”, a clear indicator that the club would certainly make a strong move to get their man.

What could be a telling sign of the player’s determination to leave are reports that David Gill, United’s chief executive, has been caught cold by the latest developments, and unable to even make contact with Rooney’s representatives to try to placate the player from a move.

All Rooney has indicated is that his decison is firm, as a result of the financial aspects of a move, as well as the fracture of his relationship with Ferguson.

[Via EspnStar]

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