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Showing posts with label English. Show all posts
Showing posts with label English. Show all posts

Monday, November 14, 2011

McIlroy: Best XI is tough task

14/11/2011 10:49, Report by Adam Marshall

"It's so hard to look at all the different eras because, in every one, there's been great players. It's one of the hardest things I've ever done."
- Sammy McIlroy
Sammy McIlroy
Sammy McIlroy may have managed at international level but he admits picking United's all-time best XI was one of the "hardest things I've ever done."

The former Reds midfielder, who played for and managed Northern Ireland as well as taking charge of several league clubs, was on a legends' panel for Manchester United's Greatest Ever XI, the official 4-disc DVD set out today.

"It's so hard to compare players from all the different eras, because there have been great players throughout Manchester United's history," McIlroy told ManUtd.com.

"I made my debut in 1971 and it's hard enough just choosing between all the players I was lucky enough to play with - Bryan Robson, Lou Macari, Alex Stepney, George Best, Jimmy Greenhoff, Willie Morgan, Brian Kidd... I could go on and on and on. Picking just the one team is so difficult but that's a measure of Manchester United as a club - the biggest in the world with so many fantastic players."

McIlroy accepts the final line-up showcased on the DVD will have been influenced by the age of the fans voting on ManUtd.com earlier this year.

"You hear young kids say Cristiano Ronaldo was better than George Best or that Eric Cantona was better than Denis Law," said McIlroy. "Football is all about opinion. I'm sure the fans could pick numerous teams and they'd still be great sides."

ManUtd.com will review the XI, position by position, as this week unfolds.

source : Manutd

Friday, November 11, 2011

Papers: Pele sticks boot in

11/11/2011 09:16 



Stuart Pink writes in the The Sun...
Pele sticks the boot in
When Sir Alex Ferguson dubbed Wayne Rooney "The White Pele", the real deal was flattered but was hardly in agreement. Typical of the attitude that made him the world's greatest footballer, Brazilian legend Pele feels Rooney, 26, has a long way to go before he can be talked about in the same breath as him. Pele, 71, told The Sun on a visit to London: "I am a very big fan of Rooney. He always fights for the team. He is not too technical, his strength is his heart. He's a good player. But you can't really compare him to me. I scored a lot of goals. I don't know if Rooney has." The England striker shouldn't feel too disheartened — just look at what he has to say about Lionel Messi, the most breathtaking star in the game today and a contender to his status as the finest player ever. He said: "I think a 'great' player is defined by their performances at the World Cup. For example, watch Lionel Messi play for Barcelona. He is very good. Exceptional. But for Argentina, he's completely different. Compare him to Zinedine Zidane. He won the World Cup and was at the top for 15 years. He was a more complete player than Messi. Before Zidane there was Johan Cruyff, Franz Beckenbauer, Michel Platini and Bobby Moore. Great players who won World Cups or, in Cruyff and Platini's case, starred in them. Wayne's aggression is a big part of his game - you cannot take that away from him. In my time we didn't have many yellow cards and red cards. Now, the players are very well protected. But a player does have a responsibility to behave himself. It's hard to change the personality of the player but maybe they can adjust."
The Times pick up on the story that Great Britain will open their London 2012 Olympic football campaign at Old Trafford.
source :  Manutd

Johnstone deal extended

10/11/2011 11:17, Report by Adam Marshall



Sam Johnstone has extended his loan spell with Scunthorpe until 9 December.
The FA Youth Cup-winning keeper has impressed with the Iron but a dislocated finger has kept him out of action.
After receiving treatment on the troublesome digit, the 18-year-old is able to link up with Alan Knill's side again although he was forced to pull out of the England Under-19 squad with the problem.
"It was just unfortunate for Sam that he picked up an injury in training while he was back here actually," Reserves boss Warren Joyce told ManUtd.com. "But he will be going back when he's fit again."
Oliver Norwood is also with Scunthorpe and has been cleared to play in the FA Cup tie with AFC Wimbledon at the weekend.

source : manutd

Danny backs Cleverley

08/11/2011 16:07, Report by A Marshall & S Bartram
Danny Welbeck believes his United pal Tom Cleverley can mature into a world-class talent.
The two team-mates are friends off the pitch and have combined to good effect this term, with the midfielder's inch-perfect cross allowing Welbeck to head the Reds' opening goal of the campaign against Spurs in August.
Cleverley's midfield probing has been missed after two spells on the sidelines for the former Wigan loanee but United's No19 feels he will continue to make rapid progress on his return to action.
"I think he can become a world-class player," insisted Welbeck in an exclusive interview with United Review, the club's official programme. "Football is such a simple game, it's how hard you make it for yourself. Tom keeps it so simple and it is hard to do that when you're in centre-midfield, but Tom does that. He gets the ball, passes it, moves into space and he's just always there as an extra option every time you’ve got the ball.
"He's really good to play with, I enjoy playing with him so much and he's got the awareness, the vision and the ability to pick out a pass and actually produce a final pass as well and he's just going to carry on improving. You can see that every single day in training. He's a really good player."
It's little wonder the pair's combination looks so natural considering their upbringing through the ranks at Carrington.
"We are really good friends off the field and quite a few people come up to us and tell us that it shows on the field," added Welbeck.
"We've been through the same training schedule growing up through the Academy, the same coaches who have taught us the same things, so we're on the same wavelength and we know each other's games inside out, more or less.
"We just try to get the ball moving as quick as possible, keep it one-touch and two-touch and I think that's the right way to break down teams."

source : manutd

Midfield duo back at United

09/11/2011 16:26, Report by Adam Marshall




Loan stars Ryan Tunnicliffe and Danny Drinkwater have been training with the United first-team this week.
Reserves boss Warren Joyce, who is tasked with keeping track of the loanees' progress, revealed that the young midfielders have been enjoying working with a squad that has been depleted by international commitments.
Tunnicliffe has impressed at Peterborough and managed to force his way into Darren Ferguson's plans while Drinkwater has been earning good reviews for his displays at Barnsley, although he has picked up a one-game suspension with the Tykes.
"We try to get the loan boys back here," Joyce told ManUtd.com. "Ryan has been training today with the first-team and Danny was in yesterday.
"We try to bring them back during the international break just to have a little taste of training with the first-team in that group today. It keeps them in the club and makes sure they feel part of things."

Defender Scott Wootton is also back at Carrington as he recovers from an injury that has put his loan switch to Peterborough on hold.
"Scott's knee problem is going to take a couple of weeks but he's back here training," explained Joyce.

source : manutd

Monday, November 7, 2011

BARCLAYS PREMIER LEAGUE TABLE [updated]

source : manutd

updated : November 7th, 2011

Boss glad for final whistle

05/11/2011 18:27, Report by Nick Coppack


On his big day, Sir Alex Ferguson could have done without his players putting him through a nervy final 15 minutes.

Sunderland were the visitors at Old Trafford on the eve of the United manager’s 25th anniversary in charge of the club and the Black Cats appeared determined to spoil the party. The Reds went ahead in first-half injury time but couldn’t extend the lead in the second period and had to soak up plenty of late Sunderland pressure.

“That last 15 minutes was torture,” Sir Alex told MUTV afterwards. “I’d have been quite happy if the whistle had gone at half-time when we were 1-0 up. Sunderland threw everything at us and played very well in that last 15 minutes.”

The Reds, on the other hand, looked off the pace for long periods. Even the decisive goal came via a Sunderland player, Wes Brown having the misfortune to head into his own net on his return to Old Trafford.
Sir Alex wondered whether the magnitude of the occasion – tributes to the boss were in abundance before kick-off, including the renaming of the North Stand to the Sir Alex Ferguson Stand – was a factor in the sub-standard performance.

“It was an anxious day for the players. I think they showed that. They wanted to do well for me.
“These occasions can be a wee bit like that. I remember the 50th anniversary of the Munich air disaster and we lost 2-0 to Manchester City. That [occasion] got to the players that day. Maybe it happened a little bit today.”

Sunderland fans were unhappy with the match officials at full-time after an incident that saw a combination of referee Lee Mason and assistant award a penalty and then change his mind. But Sir Alex couldn’t understand the fuss.

“I couldn’t believe it [when he awarded a penalty],” he said. “I clearly saw it. I thought the Korean boy [Sunderland’s Ji Dong-Won] had handled it.

“The fact the assistant put his flag across his chest indicated [the award of] a penalty. I don’t think Lee Mason had any idea why, though. And you saw how our players reacted. [In the end] he gave the correct decision.”


source : manutd

Saturday, November 5, 2011

05/11/2011 15:13, Report by Adam Bostock
 




 

Stand renamed for Sir Alex

Sir Alex Ferguson has received a very special 25th anniversary tribute from his grateful employers at Manchester United - with Old Trafford's biggest stand being renamed in his honour.

The North Stand is now known as the Sir Alex Ferguson Stand, after a new sign was unveiled just before kick-off against Sunderland. It's the first time in the 101-year history of Old Trafford that a stand has been named after an individual. In addition, the renowned sculptor Philip Jackson has been commissioned to create a statue of the manager. This will be erected outside the stand's entrance, hopefully in August 2012.

In a club statement, United chief executive David Gill said: "To be at a club of our standing for so long is truly remarkable. In that time, Sir Alex has established himself as the most successful manager in British football history, winning countless trophies and creating numerous sides admired around the world for their flair and ability.

"Sir Alex's contribution to United has been immense and the magnificent stadium we have here at Old Trafford is a testament to his ability and success. The Board felt it right to take this unique step, as well as to commission Philip Jackson to create a statue to go alongside his other great pieces here of Sir Matt and the United Trinity. These tributes are made with the grateful thanks of the owners, board, staff, players and fans of Manchester United, for the great pleasure Sir Alex has brought us all over a quarter of a century."

Sir Alex saw his name on the former North Stand for the first time after walking through a guard of honour formed by both teams. Talking on the stadium PA system, he remarked how proud he felt to "work for the greatest football club in the world" and to have managed "some of the greatest footballers we've ever seen in this country."

source : manutd

Boss: Bruce always a battlerBoss: Bruce always a battler

05/11/2011 08:33, Report by Adam Marshall

Sir Alex has paid tribute to Steve Bruce, his opposite number on Saturday, but a man who provided a telling contribution to ending United's agonising 26-year wait for a league title.
Bruce was a courageous captain for the Reds and scored more than his fair share of goals, including the two late headers against Sheffield Wednesday that secured the upper hand in the 1992/1993 title race. Ahead of the latest meeting with one of his former players, the boss was keen to recall the attributes of the bargain buy from Norwich and discuss the Sunderland chief's qualities.
"There are two thing about Steve Bruce which I always find remarkable," revealed Sir Alex. "One: he never got an England cap. And, in fairness, [Sir] Bobby Robson apologised to him for that.
"The second thing: when he had his medical, the doctor wasn't sure he should pass it. [Chairman] Martin Edwards came in and told me his knees are not that good. I thought: 'Christ, he's not missed a game in five years'.
"Nobody else I've ever managed has played through the sort of injuries he had to play with. In his last few years, he was starting to break up! It's amazing he was able to do it for so long.
"We went to play Liverpool and he had a hamsting injury the week before. I was wondering who I should replace him with and then, on Friday, when we were doing the drills at the training ground, he came over the hill clutching his hamstring but said he'd be okay to play. I told him not to be silly but he said he'd be fine and he went out and played against Liverpool."

source : manutd

Beckham's debt to Sir Alex

"You see so many young players fall by the wayside but under the boss that was never going to happen. He looked after us all and gave us everything we needed to become the players and the men that we are today."
- David Beckham


 04/11/2011 06:53, Report by Gemma Thompson

David Beckham has credited Sir Alex Ferguson with making him into the player and man he is today.

In an exclusive interview for a special Sir Alex tribute magazine created by United Review, the Treble winner says he will always be grateful to the manager for guidance and encouragement during his trophy-laden time at Old Trafford.

"The boss deserves almost all the credit [for how my career has turned out]," Beckham told us.

"It’s 50/50 with my parents – that’s how highly I regard the boss. My parents were the ones that brought me up and helped get me to a certain level in my career, and the manager is the one that took me to a whole different level of playing for Manchester United and for England.

"He was the one that gave me my chance as a young kid. He gave me my debut at Brighton [in September 1992] and my Champions League debut against Galatasaray when I played at Old Trafford and scored my first goal for the club.

"He’s the sole reason why I was successful at Manchester United and successful in my career.

"You see so many young players fall by the wayside but under the boss that was never going to happen. He looked after us all and gave us everything we needed to become the players and the men that we are today."
As Sir Alex prepares to celebrate 25 years at the Old Trafford helm on Sunday, Beckham insists his former boss is quite simply a one-off.

"It [spending 25 years at a club like United] just doesn’t happen in football anymore. That loyalty and respect for just one club is unbelievable and it’s not something you see these days," explained the midfielder.

"It says a lot about Manchester United as a club and a lot about the manager when you consider how long he’s been there, and just look at the success we’ve had over the years. It’s been amazing. But that’s what happens when you have stability and a man that’s so passionate and hungry and has the love for one club that he has."
source : manutd

Welbeck warning for Sunderland

"I know quite a few of the players, so it'll be good to see them again, but, when it comes down to it, I'll be ruthless. I just want to win the game. There's no friends out on the pitch."
- Danny Welbeck


Danny Welbeck has warned Sunderland there is no room for sentiment in Saturday's Barclays Premier League encounter. 

The England striker thoroughly enjoyed last season's loan spell at the Stadium of Light and is full of admiration for Steve Bruce's Black Cats. The term on Wearside clearly helped develop Welbeck into a player capable of holding down a first-team place at Old Trafford and, although he's looking forward to meeting his former team-mates, his thoughts are solely focused on helping United collect another three points.

"I know quite a few of the players, so it'll be good to see them again, but, when it comes down to it, I'll be ruthless," Welbeck insisted. "I just want to win the game. There's no friends out on the pitch.

"It was a great club to go to - a massive club and I really enjoyed my time there. The fans were great and I can't thank them enough."

Although the Reds have put the derby disaster to City behind them with three consecutive wins and clean sheets in all competitions, the scars may take some time to heal for the players - even Welbeck, who was one of the brightest performers in defeat.

"It was the lowest point of my career," he explained. "We didn't do ourselves justice and it was tough to go down to 10 men against a good side.

"Maybe we should have shut up shop and bided our time but that's football and we need to get over that.

"Since I've been a little kid, I've been taught to go out and win the game and, once Fletch [Darren Fletcher] scored that great goal, the crowd got behind us. It was great support from the whole stadium and it egged us on a bit to try and get another two goals. In the end, it wasn't to be."

Danny Welbeck was speaking to ManUtd.com and MUTV.
source : manutd

Manchester United v Sunderland: Squad sheets


After scoring 21 goals in their first five Premier League fixtures Manchester United have managed only six in the last five and lost the fluency that made them so irresistible in the opening weeks of the season. Even so, it would constitute a major surprise if Sunderland, with only one victory against United in 20 attempts, were to do anything to deny Sir Alex Ferguson a satisfying 25th anniversary. Steve Bruce, returning to his former club, has assembled a squad with a heavy United influence but one of the old boys, John O'Shea, misses out because of injury. Daniel Taylor
Venue Old Trafford , tomorrow 3pm
Tickets Sold out
Last season Man Utd 2 Sunderland 0
Referee L Mason
This season's matches 6 Y23, R0, 3.83 cards per game
Odds Man Utd 2-9 Sunderland 5-1 Draw 14-1
United
Probable starters in bold, contenders in light Photograph: Graphic

Manchester United

Subs from Lindegaard, Amos, Fryer, Ferdinand, F da Silva, Macheda, Diouf, Berbatov, Welbeck, Valencia, Gibson
Doubtful Carrick (back)
Injured Rafael (shoulder, 19 Nov), Cleverley (ankle, 19 Nov), Young (toe, 19 Nov), Giggs (hamstring, 19 Nov), Smalling (foot, Dec), Owen (thigh, Dec), Anderson (unspecified)
Suspended None
Form guide WLDWDW
Disciplinary record Y15 R1
Leading scorer Rooney 9

Sunderland

Subs from Carson, Laing, Elmohamady, Gardner, Meyler, Cattermole, Ji, McClean, Cook
Doubtful Vaughan (groin)
Injured O'Shea (hamstring, 19 Nov), Campbell (knee, Dec), Mignolet (nose/fractured eye socket, Jan), Gordon (knee, Feb)
Suspended Bramble (indefinite club ban)
Form guide DWLDLW
Disciplinary record Y20 R1
Leading scorer Larsson 3

Match pointers

• Sunderland have failed to score in seven of their last nine Premier League games against Manchester United
• United have allowed more shots from open play (115) than any other top-flight team this term; David de Gea making the most saves (69)
• Sebastian Larsson has scored 40% of the direct free-kicks converted in the top flight this season (two of five)
• United have scored in all of their past 35 home league games
• Stéphane Sessègnon has either scored or assisted in his side's last four games

Boss: Class of 92 no one-off

"It's ridiculous to think that, in 2011, you can only pick a boy who lives near Old Trafford. Barcelona signed a boy from China, one from Japan and that sums it up."
- Sir Alex Ferguson
Sir Alex has predicted that the success of introducing so many players into the first-team from the Class of '92 will happen again.

Many pundits view the emergence of the likes of Gary Neville, David Beckham, Ryan Giggs, Paul Scholes and Nicky Butt at the same time as unique with the boss able to promote so many youth-teamers into his starting line-up.

Last season's FA Youth Cup victors drew some flattering comparisons with the stars of yesteryear and are continuing to make progress through the ranks at Old Trafford.

And the manager is in no doubt that the club will continue to reap the benefits of a productive Academy system, particularly now the rules are being changed to allow the scouts to cast a wider net.

"The class of 1992 wasn't a one-off," he insisted. "It will happen again. A club like Manchester United will always keep chasing the dream that we'll get another bunch of lads like that again.

"If the Academy system changes to how it should be, then we're capable of doing that. It's ridiculous to think that, in 2011, you can only pick a boy who lives near Old Trafford. Barcelona signed a boy from China, one from Japan and that sums it up."

The move to Carrington has been a major factor in helping United develop young talent and provide first-class facilities for all the staff with more enhancements of the complex planned.

"The club is massive now," added Sir Alex. "The great thing was that we moved from The Cliff to Carrington. That was the best thing that ever happened to the club.

"The Cliff had a great history but it was too small. We couldn't have achieved what we've achieved now had we stayed. There's no way we could have accommodated 110 staff at The Cliff as we do at Carrington."
source : manutd

Sir Alex Ferguson will never really leave Manchester United behind

As the great Scot celebrates 25 years at Old Trafford, those who followed Matt Busby know how tricky the succession will be.

The Manchester United manager, Sir Alex Ferguson, does not like talking about retirement. Photograph: Dave Thompson/PA

It was not the best of starts. The first match, a quarter of a century ago, was a 2-0 defeat on a bumpy pitch at Oxford United. In the dressing room, Alex Ferguson was finding it hard to disguise his nerves.
"I can remember him naming the team," Peter Davenport says. "He went through the defence and midfield and said: 'Right, up front, Frank and Nigel. OK lads?' There was a pause, then Robbo said: 'Nigel? Who's Nigel?' Fergie points at me and goes: 'Him, Nigel Davenport.' He'd got me confused with the actor from Howards' Way."
What has happened over the following 25 years identifies Ferguson as a man of phenomenal staying power and consistency. Sir Matt Busby was 62 when he closed his reign at Manchester United. Brian Clough left the game at 58. At Liverpool, Bob Paisley lasted until 64. Bill Shankly was 60. Nobody has managed longer than Ferguson at the highest level. Or with greater competitive courage. Never has a manager been so relentless in his ambition and so deeply embedded in the business of winning football matches and forming history.
He turns 70 next month and the mind goes back to 2003, when Sir Bobby Robson reached that age. Ferguson sat behind his desk at United's training ground and blew out his cheeks in disbelief. He was asked whether he could see himself going on so long and his response was delivered like a slap. "No bloody chance."
It has been an epic run. The 25th anniversary arrives on Sunday, and still there is no sign of the system getting the better of him. Retirement, Ferguson once said, is for other people. As long as he has his health, he says, he will continue to work, and he cites the cancer diagnosis of his father, Alexander, within a week of retiring from the Fairfields shipyard in Govan. "There are too many examples of people who retire and are in their box soon after. Because you're taking away the very thing that makes you alive."
But there will come a time when Ferguson has to cut himself free. Retirement isn't something he can file away in a drawer and when it comes to the lessons of history, the Busby handover and the ordeals of the men who replaced him, the critical question is how Ferguson will make his retreat and whether the club can manage the loss without repeating the mistakes made before.
Wilf McGuinness inherited the team from Busby in 1969 and, by his own admission, was never fully accepted by the senior players. Probably because he was not Busby. Now 74, his affection for United still shines brightly but he, better than anybody, understands how difficult it can be to replace the man behind an empire.
"Did I feel I had the full respect of all the players all the time?" he says. "Sadly, the honest answer has to be 'not really'."
He lasted eight months before Busby reappointed himself as manager. Or "four seasons", as McGuinness prefers to describe it: "Summer, autumn, winter and spring – and summer was the most successful."
McGuinness recalls it as "a supremely harrowing period". A mutinous one, too. McGuinness dropped Bobby Charlton and Denis Law and tried to assert some authority. One player went to the Sunday Times with his grievances, complaining on condition of anonymity that Busby's replacement was so bad at his job he would waste £1m if he were given it to spend. The transfer record at the time was £165,000.
It may be that the manager second in line to Ferguson has the more desirable job. The first man in will have to possess unbreakable self-belief, if such a man exists. Every trophy, every memorable achievement, every European campaign will be set against his predecessor's record. Every defeat will be accompanied by sniping that he is not a patch on the last man.
"You're going to need someone very experienced," Ferguson says. "It's not going to be a job for a young manager."
David Gill, the United chief executive, will be in charge of the process, though he says Ferguson will be prominently involved. "It would be a collective body, not a big body, but we would get all the input to make sure we make the appropriate choice. There won't be meltdown. It will clearly be a sea change for the club and we have to be ready."
But United made similar noises in 2002, when Ferguson was supposed to retire, and the man they chose, Sven-Goran Eriksson, is now regarded at Old Trafford as a dodged bullet. Since Eriksson took the call to inform him Ferguson had changed his mind, he has closed out his time with England then hopped between jobs with Manchester City (11 months), Mexico (10 months), Notts County (seven months), Ivory Coast (three months) and Leicester City (12 months). Six jobs on three continents, five of them since 2006.
José Mourinho is the name at the top of every betting-shop board, ahead of Pep Guardiola and David Moyes third, but for now all that can be said with certainty is that whoever comes in will be spared some of the issues that faced Ferguson when he replaced Ron Atkinson in 1986.
Atkinson had let his team grow old, whereas Ferguson has unselfishly hoarded players who may not reach their potential until well after he is gone. His goalkeeper, David de Gea, could be at Old Trafford for a decade. Ditto a back four of Rafael da Silva, Phil Jones, Chris Smalling and Fábio da Silva. "These young players are the future of Manchester United," Ferguson says, and there is a stark contrast to be drawn with the club he found 25 years ago.
One of Ferguson's first instructions to United's board was to start clearing out the older players and replace them with younger versions. A friend asked Ferguson what he made of the youth policy Atkinson had left behind. "What youth policy?" he replied. "He's left me a shower of shit."
Frank O'Farrell also inherited an ageing team. He took over from Busby in 1971 and lasted 81 matches. He reflects on it being "a bit like following Lord Olivier on stage".
O'Farrell, like McGuinness, ran into problems with the older, more established players. "I once made Denis Law substitute and he didn't want to sit on the bench to watch the game," he says. "He wanted to stay in the dressing room."
In the words of McGuinness, Busby was "the perfect role model for any aspiring manager, but an extremely difficult act to follow. Matt had so much knowledge, but he was also an immensely mature character with that wonderful deep voice. He had a certain aura, a magnetic presence which exuded calmness and reassurance. In contrast, I was not particularly mature and my voice was not remarkable in any way, except for being loud."
O'Farrell has just put his memories into a book that will make hard reading for anyone who considers Busby to be flawless of character. All Change at Old Trafford depicts Busby as a man who could not let go.
"When I arrived, Matt was still in the manager's office and there were workmen constructing a new small office for the new manager – me – down the corridor," O'Farrell, who is now 84, says. "The alarm bells started ringing. Matt was not manager any more, but he was still going to keep the office."
Busby had taken on the role of "junior director" but, according to O'Farrell, he interfered with team matters to the point where he became "a hindrance". Busby had "a streak of vindictiveness" and at one point berated O'Farrell for leaving out the 34-year-old Charlton and criticised him for playing Martin Buchan, one of the new manager's signings.
"A lot of the senior players had a close relationship with Matt, even playing golf with him, and they'd take their gripes to him," O'Farrell says. "I suspect he would be saying he would have done things differently. Matt questioned my decisions and created discontent. He wasn't the manager, but he couldn't let go."
The point is relevant because Ferguson has said that after he steps down as manager, he will stay at Old Trafford in a new role. What that will be is not clear, but a boardroom position is possible. O'Farrell has said that would be a mistake. "What happened once could happen again. Sir Alex will find it almost impossible to remain a part of the club and resist still being a counsellor and guru to his old players."
This is not a subject the man himself is willing to debate at length. Ferguson does not like to talk about retirement, and tends to greet questions on the subject with one of those stares that can make you feel as though you have sawdust in your mouth. When it is unavoidable, like this week, he will shift awkwardly in his seat, like a pools winner who has forgotten to tick the no-publicity box.
At his press conference this week the first question about his anniversary was met by his stock rebuttal: "I'm nae getting into that." Later, his position relaxed and, as he reminisced on the last quarter of a century, the 37 trophies and some of the lead performers – "Robson, Whiteside, McClair, Hughes, Ince, Keane – God – Cantona. What a collection" – before enthusing about the new generation, we were reminded of the fundamental reason why he does not want to contemplate a future without football.
Football is the thing that makes the most sense of his life. Twenty-five years at Manchester United? "It's a fairytale," Ferguson said.
And retirement? "All I can say is that I'm looking forward to the next 25 years."
source : theguardian

Jonny Evans refuses to be scapegoat for Manchester United's derby rout

• Evans was sent off in United's 1-6 defeat to City
• 'One red card doesn't make you a bad player,' he says
Jonny Evans has refused to take the blame for Manchester United's 1-6 defeat to Manchester City. Photograph: Lee Smith/Action Images

Jonny Evans says he cannot accept total responsibility for Manchester United's six-goal capitulation against Manchester City.

Sir Alex Ferguson described the result as "an embarrassment" which United will be reminded of for years, the pivotal moment coming when Evans was sent off at the start of the second half for a clumsy foul on Mario Balotelli.

The Northern Ireland defender does feel bad about his misdemeanour, but as United were only a goal down when Evans made his premature exit, the 23-year-old cannot see how he can be blamed entirely for what happened afterwards.

"When you go down to 10 men you don't expect to concede five goals," Evans said. "I felt guilty for the fans because obviously it is not nice. I am a Manchester United fan myself. I know the hurt that was felt by the people who follow United around everywhere."

Although Evans insists he was not worried Ferguson might make him the scapegoat, there must have been a nagging fear in his mind once he returned from his automatic one-match suspension.

As it turned out, Rio Ferdinand made way for the return of Nemanja Vidic at Everton last weekend, Evans then retaining his place for the midweek Champions League win over Otelul Galati, when United kept a third successive clean sheet.

"It was nice the manager stuck with me, although one red card doesn't make you a bad player all of a sudden," Evans added. "I didn't feel I would be used as a scapegoat. I knew the manager would make an honest decision.

"I am not the type of player who would sulk about it if I got dropped. He is the greatest British manager of all time. Whatever decision he takes, I will happily accept it."

What Ferguson would doubtless have been influenced by was the mature attitude Evans adopted to his setback. Even 12 months ago, the Belfast-born defender accepts he might have floundered. Not any more it seems.

"Last season I had one or two games where I let things get to me," he added. "My confidence went a little bit. I am stronger mentally now. I am more equipped to deal with those situations and I actually feel like my performances have been good this season."

Evans cannot afford to rest on his laurels, though. Ferdinand is clearly a man with something to prove at present, while Phil Jones has already done enough in his short time at United to show why Ferguson was prepared to pay £17m to prise the 19-year-old from Blackburn in the summer. However, Evans has a special incentive to face Sunderland at Old Trafford tomorrow after spending two loan spells on Wearside before establishing himself at United.

"I have a lot of fond memories of my time up there and it won't be easy," Evans said. "Sunderland have had a slow start to the season but Steve Bruce has brought a lot of new players in and it has taken them a while to gel.

"I am sure they will put on a big performance because Steve's teams always seem to do well."
Wayne Rooney should be restored to a more advanced role tomorrow after his game in central midfield in midweek, with Darren Fletcher likely to be back in that position and Danny Welbeck among those hoping for a recall.

Anders Lindegaard could also play in goal as Ferguson is mindful of the Dane's status as second choice for his country, meaning that he might not have a game for a fortnight.

The overriding aim, though, is another three points to maintain some kind of pressure on Manchester City, who have failed to win just once so far this term.

"We have played quite a lot of the big teams around us and I don't think City have really had that," Evans said. "They could go on and win all those games, you don't know. We just have to keep our own run going and hope they slip up."
source : theguardian

FA to appeal against Wayne Rooney's three-match international ban

• England striker banned for group stage of Euro 2012
• Rooney was sent off during qualifier against Montenegro
The FA will appeal against Wayne Rooney's three-match ban that would see him miss the entire Euro 2012 group stage. Photograph: Michael Regan/The FA via Getty Images
The Football Association has confirmed it will appeal against the three-match ban that would see Wayne Rooney miss the group phase at Euro 2012. The ruling body had been wary of his punishment being extended but has been reassured that this will not happen. Once Uefa acknowledges receipt of the fax lodging the appeal, a decision is expected to be made within six days. It is feasible that a conclusion will be reached by the end of next week.
"We will be appealing against the three-match suspension Wayne Rooney received following the recent Euro 2012 qualifier in Montenegro," said an FA spokesman. "We received written reasons for the red card on Tuesday afternoon and we were given until midnight [on Friday] to respond."
While the FA believes it is worth pursuing the matter, there is a consciousness at Uefa of the unpleasant nature of the offence by Rooney during last month's Euro 2012 qualifier in Montenegro when he let his frustration over bad control led him to kick Miodrag Dzudovic. The Montenegro defender has since spoken in support of Rooney.
In all of this, it tends to be overlooked that this was not a first offence by the Manchester United striker in the qualification group. He had not even been aware that he would miss the qualifier with Switzerland in June of this year after collecting his second yellow card of the qualifying campaign against Wales in March.
The conduct by Rooney on the international scene will be of particular concern to Fabio Capello since the player's behaviour has been markedly different of late with United. He has been shown only a single yellow card for his club this season. The stress and even neurosis that surrounds the national team continues to do its work.
It is not known if Rooney will travel to make a personal appeal to Uefa over the ban. England duty has been known to inflame him and there was a red card for the stamp on Portugal's Ricardo Carvalho in the quarter-finals of the 2006 World Cup. Rooney is more settled now, particularly with his club. Nonetheless, he continues to be a cause of anxiety to his international manager.
In its way the petulance was even more worrying than the aggression displayed against Dzudovic in Podgorica. Nonetheless, the patience shown to Rooney by Capello is unlikely to disappear. There are too few performers who can come close to equalling the impact of Rooney when he is at peace and focused on the task.
John Terry is another figure in whom Capello has invested faith. The Italian, unusually, went back on his verdict when reinstating him as captain. The manager, however, is far too sensible to involve himself in the furore over the latest difficulty for Terry. There have been allegations that Terry directed a racist remark at the Queens Park Rangers defender Anton Ferdinand, although the England captain denies making the comment. Capello has no intention of involving himself in the matter and the FA will be left to reach a verdict on the issue.
Underlying such issues is the fact that, regardless of any opinions held by Capello, his need of Terry is great when the future of Rio Ferdinand is in question now that he has trouble reaching and sustaining fitness. There are hard times ahead in the closing months of Capello's time with England. By now he will have come to accept sudden disruption as a natural state of affairs but his hopes of ending his tenure with a flourish have not looked good this week.

source : theguardian

Friday, November 4, 2011

Champions arrive in Beijing

Chinese fans queued outside the Olympic Stadium in Beijing on Friday to visit United's 'Champions Experience'.

Champions arrive in Beijing

28/10/2011 14:53, Report by Richard Johnson

United's 'Champions Experience' opened its doors to the public of Beijing on Friday, on the doorstep of the iconic Olympic 'Bird's Nest' Stadium.
The experience takes fans through the history of each one of the Reds’ 19 league title wins, displaying artefacts which rarely leave the Old Trafford museum, such as the first ever league medal won by United, shirts worn by Denis Law, Teddy Sheringham and Ruud van Nistelrooy, and boots worn by Wayne Rooney and David Beckham.
The finale to the exhibition is a stunning Epson 3D projection showcase, which shows United’s stars in a completely new dimension.
The experience has previously been to Shanghai and was well received by the Beijing fans with over 2,000 visitors on Friday alone.
As well as the Champions Experience, the Barclays Premier League Trophy Tour is also on site, which gives fans a chance to see a number of interactive displays, as well as get close to the silverware.
If seeing United memorablia isn't enough, there are also giveaways happening all day and the chance to enter a lucky draw to win a shirt signed by members of the United team.
The experience is free to the public and open from 10am to 6pm on Saturday 29th and Sunday 30th October.
source : www.manutd.com

United 2 Otelul Galati 0

United 2 Otelul Galati 0

2 NOVEMBER 2011, OLD TRAFFORD Attendance: 74,847

02/11/2011 21:30, Report by Nick Coppack 

United's Champions League victory over Romania's Otelul Galati was workmanlike rather than wonderful. But a win's a win and this one was enough to leave Sir Alex's men in a commanding position at the top of Group C, with two games to play.

Antonio Valencia's eighth-minute tap-in was all that separated the sides on the scoreboard until Wayne Rooney's late long-range effort deflected off Cristian Sarghi and past the Galati goalkeeper. But it wasn't as if United found the going particularly tough against Galati; the Reds actually looked comfortable, if not wholly convincing, for long periods.

It was a similar story a fortnight ago in Bucharest when two second-half spot-kicks, both won and converted by Rooney, handed United the three points. Rooney didn't quite get his name on the scoresheet again in this match (UEFA have declared the Reds' second an own goal), but he still had a big impact, albeit from a much different area of the pitch.

Indeed, Sir Alex took the unusual step of deploying Wayne in a deep-lying midfield role. And although it was unfamiliar teriitory, the Reds' no.10 didn't disappoint. Within 40 seconds he had chased Liviu Antal down towards the corner flag and harried the Romanian into coughing up possession.

Rooney then went on to demonstrate, in understated fashion, a knack for keeping the ball moving with simple first-time passes, interspersing these with a steady array of more ambitious long balls. In many ways, his performance was reminiscent of the way Paul Scholes used to quietly dictate a game's rhythmn.

Indeed, it was the Reds' no.10 who was responsible for launching the attack that yielded the early opener. His long, raking pass to the right wing found Dimitar Berbatov, who held the ball up briefly before releasing Phil Jones on the overlap. His ball to the near post just eluded Michael Owen’s stretch, but waiting behind, unmarked and only three yards from goal, was Antonio Valencia. He was never going to miss.

The joy in the stands was tempered a minute later when Owen, who appeared to have injured himself while attempting to reach Jones' cross, limped down the tunnel and was replaced by Javier Hernandez. It was United's two full-backs, though, who came closest to adding a second before half-time. First Fabio embarked on a dribble from the left-back position that only ended when his attempt to roll the ball across goal for Berbatov was blocked by a last-ditch tackle. Along the way he'd left countless Romanians in his wake.

Then Jones surged down the right, cut inside the penalty area and unleashed a curling left-footed effort that looked bound for the far corner until Sergiu Costin intervened with a headed clearance. Galati, too, almost troubled the scorers on 42 minutes when Ionut Neagu pounced on Anderson's loose pass and advanced on goal. His effort took a touch off Rio Ferdinand, which forced David De Gea, hitherto unworked and
untroubled, into a smart reflex save.

Just after the break, Berbatov, Jones and Hernandez sparked brief panic inside the Galati penalty area with some neat interplay that cut the Romanian defence apart before goalkeeper Grahovac spread himself well to snuff out the danger. Down the other end, De Gea had to be equally alert to punch the ball clear as Antal raced to get on the end of a left-wing centre. Minutes later he gleefully clutched the ball to his chest after Costin rose at the back post to meet subsitute Sorin Frunza's corner.

Costin was in the thick of the action again when he raced back to clear off the line after Anderson combined with Berbatov to reach the return pass first and lift the ball past the onrushing Grahovac. Hernandez had a long-range shot saved and Berbatov poked a presentable chance wide of the near post on 75 minutes before Rooney added the icing on the cake with his deflected effort.

It made the final scoreline look more respectable and probably reflected more accurately the balance of play (although Galati did try and force their way back into it late on). In many ways, though, the sloppy nature of the goal summed up a match that probably won't live long in the memory of many United fans.

Rooney is running

Anderson is flying



Antonio Valencia celebrate his goal

Wednesday, November 2, 2011

Papers: Sir Alex is a genius


David McDonnell writes in the Mirror...
Secret behind 'genius' Fergie's successSir Bobby Charlton has hailed Sir Alex Ferguson a “genius” as the Manchester United boss approaches his 25th anniversary at Old Trafford. United director Charlton, who played a key role in bringing Fergie to the club from ­Aberdeen in 1986, said the Scot’s appetite for the job was as strong as ever, despite turning 70 next month. And Sir Bobby singled out ­Ferguson’s remarkable ability to continually reinvent his teams as his greatest ­managerial strength. “Alex is a genius,” said Charlton, a star of Sir Matt Busby’s legendary line-ups of the 50s and 60s. “The number of times when you think he’s gone a bridge too far, he has succeeded. Even when people thought players were too young, he didn’t. Tom Cleverley as come in this season, and he and all the young lads have started to blossom. Alex just talks to them and they listen.” Charlton, 74, also paid tribute to Fergie’s relentless desire to keep United at the top, despite the challenges they face, with Manchester City and Barcelona now laying down the gauntlet at home and abroad. “He just goes on and on without any slackening in terms of his energy, his drive and his desire to make Manchester United the best,” added the World Cup winner.

Nearly all the papers run Sir Alex's quotes on Rio Ferdinand from Tuesday's press conference, saying Rio must adapt his game or lose his place in the United team.

The Daily Mail claims the Reds "will be given short shrift if they persist with interest in Real Madrid’s Angel di Maria".

And there's plenty of coverage of the Ballon d'Or shortlist, with the press bemoaning the fact that Wayne Rooney is the only Englishman on the 23-man shortlist, which is dominated by Barcelona players.

source : manutd

Tuesday, November 1, 2011

Transfer rumours: October

Transfer rumours: October

The January transfer window may not be a priority but that hasn't stopped the newspapers speculating about which players have been crossing Sir Alex's radar in the past couple of months.
We'll keep our eyes out for any links developing throughout the world's media but remember, while our friends in the press may start many rumours, ManUtd.com is always the first website to confirm when a deal has been officially done.
Manchester United has a policy of not commenting on transfer speculation.

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