Is there really a place in football for this modern phenomenon?

It is widely know that the results of pre-season games mean very little. Cliché after cliché is rolled out about it being about the performance, or ‘gelling’ a new side and various other such cringe-worthy comments that roll off the tongues of football managers like lies from a politician. Pre-season results don’t really mean all that much, but the fitness of players needs to be maintained in the weeks preceding the campaign. Maybe it’s that players don’t work hard enough without the idea of a real fixture, but these pseudo-competitive tournaments are becoming increasingly tiresome as we see celebrities pose with endless Premier League footballers as if they have supported the club for decades.

Several managers have had their say on what they would like to do in pre-season, but crucially, making sure their men get enough rest is absolutely vital to the success of the first few weeks. With each season appearing to end later and later (and the detestable post-season friendlies) the time for rest over summer is decreasing year on year and each pre-season tournament halfway around the world closes down the window for summer relaxation.

The Copa America this summer has left several players missing much of their pre-season excitement, but would this be a problem if they didn’t insist on travelling to another corner of the world?

The Barclays Asia Trophy has recently come to an end and, with three Premier League clubs competing, one of which faced a near walk-through game against a local ‘all-star’ team which just reflected the intensity of the whole ‘tournament’ as a whole. Maybe the training in heat and humidity is beneficial to pre-season preparations, but the whole façade always seems based on building the profile of the club from a business perspective rather than increasing chances of victory on the pitch.

The business benefits of these tournaments are obvious and clubs are being demanded to be run more and more like businesses with the effects of FFP. However, managers have voiced concerns at the planning of pre-season tours that they feel are not helpful to their preparation. If Chelsea or Manchester City want to play Roma or Real Madrid in a pre-season friendly, the additional travel to Melbourne of Los Angeles seems hard to justify to fitness coaches and physios.

By all means, looking to build the club from a business point of view makes sense, but the impact on the team’s conditioning should not be overlooked. The travel times might not have a particularly negative effect on players, but if managers are unable to run pre-season as they want to it cannot be good for the squad.

Managers rely heavily only the start to a season and often do not recover if they have a particularly bad first month or two. Slightly competitive football may be a necessity for some managers, but there are undoubtedly occasions where the commercial obligations of trips to Australasia or North America have had a negative effect on the players.

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Ultimately, very minor pre-season tournaments, like the Barclays Asia Trophy or Emirates Cup, have little to no effect on helping players to hit the ground running. It may well help to sell grounds out around the world, but the false competitive image should be no justification for the money making ventures to the Far-East or LA.

Norwich set to battle West Ham for Reds starlet

Liverpool manager Brendan Rodgers is pondering the future of midfielder Jonjo Shelvey as Norwich City became the first team to make an enquiry, according to the Daily Mail.

Shelvey is with the England under-21’s in Isreal at present and is to be allowed an extended holiday once he returns.

The 21-year-old has been a bit part player for Rodgers this season although his passion and creativity have shone when he got his chance.

Norwich are looking to spend big this summer in order to continue their stability in the top flight and having already tied down Ricky Van Wolfswinkel they have moved on to Shelvey.

West Ham have also been linked with a move for the former Charlton lad who may need to leave Merseyside in order to further his career and gain regular first team football.

Liverpool are expected to want more than the £5million Norwich are offering and so a bidding war and negotiations are set to unfold.

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Chelsea makes it two out of two

Chelsea have beaten Reading 4-2 on Wednesday night to make it two wins from two games and move to the top of the Premier League table.

Frank Lampard opened the scoring with his second penalty in two matches after 18 minutes, but to their credit the Royals stormed back to take the lead at the break through Pavel Pogrebnyak and Danny Guthrie strikes.

However, the Blues managed to get back into contention with a Gary Cahill effort on 69 minutes, before Fernando Torres and Branislav Ivanovic sealed victory for the Stamford Bridge side.

Roberto Di Matteo was pleased with the efforts of his team and glad to get three more points.

“It was a very entertaining game for the supporters. I was very pleased with how we started but then we lost a bit of our composure,” he told Sky Sports.

“In the second half we wanted to keep them under pressure and we did so. We had to take a bit of a risk but we managed to get the goals and win the game.”

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By Gareth McKnight

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Everton must beat Premier League rivals to Maddison

According to The Mirror, Norwich City are ready to cash in on James Maddison at the end of the season, with Everton among the list of clubs interested in the attacking midfielder.

What’s the story?

Maddison was strongly linked with a move away from Norwich during the January transfer window, but he ultimately remained with the Canaries.

According to The Mirror, Norwich have now admitted defeat when it comes to keeping the England Under-21 international, and he will depart Carrow Road at the end of the season.

Everton and Tottenham Hotspur have both recently been linked with Maddison, and it will be a big test of Everton’s pulling power when it comes to the future of the attacking midfielder.

It is understood that Maddison will be allowed to leave Norwich if a £30m bid comes in, and the Toffees proved in last summer’s transfer window that they are not afraid to splash the cash.

Everton must win the battle

It is certainly not going to be easy for Everton to win the race when considering that Manchester City and Liverpool are also said to be admirers of the 21-year-old.

Maddison has been in outstanding form for Norwich during the 2017-18 campaign – scoring 15 times and registering 11 assists in 47 appearances in all competitions.

It is time for the Englishman to make the step into the Premier League, and Everton must make sure that they move quickly to avoid disappointment.

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Cenk Tosun and Theo Walcott have both impressed for Everton in recent weeks, but Gylfi Sigurdsson is currently on the treatment table, and Wayne Rooney, despite a healthy goal return, has struggled to influence matches.

The thought of Maddison operating alongside Sigurdsson, Walcott and Tosun is an exciting thought for the Everton supporters, and £30m could turn out to be an absolute steal for a player who has been a cut above the rest in the Championship this season.

Liverpool, West Ham… All aboard the managerial merry-go-round!

Roll up, roll up to have a go on the managerial merry-go-round. Pick your horse: Real Madrid, Napoli, West Ham, Newcastle, Schalke 04, Derby County, Sunderland. Some top class managers have left their horses vacant, but that only means that there are top class managers available to find a horse.

But who fits where?

Let’s start at Derby. Steve McClaren has had a bit of a renaissance in English eyes over the last few years. He took charge of Derby and for a season and a bit he’s looked like taking them into the Premier League. He’s just fallen short each time and it’s cost him his position. But thanks to the good form he might just find himself offers from higher up. He’s managed to somehow land on his feet.

His successor at Derby is thought to be Paul Clement, the Real Madrid coach who has risen to fame as a young, up and coming football coach who has never played the game professionally, but learning from a great of the business – Carlo Ancelotti – has made him sought after. Taking on a club like Derby would be a good starting point in professional management and the good felicity towards a young, English manager with foreign experience and echoes of Mourinho would be palpable.

His appointment could be hijacked by Sunderland, however. Clement could be tempted – after all, who could resist the bright lights of Sunderland?

Another man who might be tempted is McClaren himself. Sunderland fans might greet this news with a mixed reaction. He failed miserably as England manager, but that’s probably not the whole story. McClaren was always pictured looking a little bit hapless – the ‘wally with the brolly’ didn’t help matters – and the fact that the English fans were promised Scolari and ended up with McClaren is probably one of the reasons he’s so reviled.

But that perception might hold against him at Sunderland too. He’d need a good start to win the fans over, but he’s a man of great experience, he’s managed in Europe and done really well in the North East before. Perhaps he really is the man for the job now that Dick Advocaat has decided that his marriage is more important than Sunderland.

Another man who could do well in the Premier League is Marcelo Bielsa. He’s been linked to West Ham, and if ever there was a club that fitted Bielsa it’s the Hammers. At least for now. Gold and Sullivan, were they to appoint ‘El Loco’ as manager, would effectively be saying to West Fans, ‘You want attacking football – here! Have all the attacking football you can handle!’ Bielsa is the antithesis of Sam Allardyce, and I for one would be giddy if Bielsa came to the Premier League – but the most recent reports see him staying in the south of France. Shame.

One man they can turn to is Roberto Di Matteo. Recently departed from the sinking ship Schalke, he’s a man who knows the Premier League and comes with a promotion, an FA Cup and a Champions League on his CV. How much you put those successes down to his abilities as a manager is a matter of personal taste, but he does have the experience at least to manage in the Premier League.

Then there’s the man who replaced Di Matteo at the Bridge – another man with Premier League experience and another man with European trophies on his CV.

The talk is that Benitez is on his way to Real Madrid and wants Raheem Sterling as his first signing. Which means he wouldn’t be coming back to the Premier League – but it would also mean that Jurgen Klopp won’t be bring that stylish beard and glasses combination to the Bernabeu next season. So if Brendan Rodgers can blow a sigh of relief that Benitez won’t be returning to Anfield to usurp his position, he’ll still have to worry about Klopp.

The hipsters-favourite Klopp loves a pressing style – ‘heavy-metal’ football, as he puts is – and he’d fit very well indeed into the Premier League with an attitude like that. Plus we’d love his hair.

All of this leaves Ancelotti free, too. He’s left Real Madrid and is reportedly heading for a sabbatical rather than returning to management, but that hasn’t stopped AC Milan trying their best to bag him on the rebound. Who needs tinder when an old friend is very interested indeed? All very disrespectful from the Milanello club towards their current beau Filippo Inzaghi, but maybe Carlo is the one that got away.

That’s just the merry-go-round contenders we know of. Manchester City seem content with Manuel Pellegrini despite the talk of Pep Guardiola. Guardiola seems content at Bayern despite his having the nerve to deliver just one trophy to the Allianz Arena this season. The cheek.

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Perhaps the two are simply waiting a season. Pep might want one more crack at the Champions League next season and Pellegrini a chance to win back the Premier League. Perhaps both men can leave next season with reputations intact, rather than under a cloud this season.

The merry go round is starting, and with no football to entertain us we have to find out fix somewhere. So roll up and take a turn, it’s a fun way to spend the day. Just be careful that all of the spinning doesn’t make you dizzy.

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Another player to leave Arsenal with nothing at the end of the tunnel

It was one of the more unusual images created this season: Barcelona celebrating wildly in the corner of the pitch at the Camp Nou following Jordi Alba’s goal in the 4-0 thumping of AC Milan, only for Alex Song to emerge from the sea of players and coaches.

Song has felt the sting of reality at Barcelona since arriving last summer. It’s been the knockback he’s needed in his football career, with the arrogance and cavalier approach at Arsenal proving to be completely unwarranted. The word has been that the player is unhappy with life on the substitute’s bench, while there have even been subtle hints of a return to Arsenal. For now, chalk this one up as another player who left Arsenal in hope of a better life, only to be left with little to nothing at the end of the tunnel.

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And you can’t say it’s not deserved. Song grew into a player at Arsenal who believed he was better than he was. He was filled with a sense of overwhelming importance, as if the team would crumble without his presence and lofted through balls to Robin van Persie. Unlike his breakout and best Premier League season in 2008-09, Song’s last campaign with Arsenal confirmed him to be something of a one-trick pony; certainly not through lack of ability, but absolutely through lack of desire.

Barcelona’s approach and eventual signing of the player was far more about the financial issues at the club than their unwavering wish to add Song to their squad. And in many ways, we’re seeing the product of that now. Javi Martinez could have been lining up for Barcelona against Bayern Munich, perhaps even alongside Pique in defence instead of the hugely inexperienced Marc Bartra. It’s what they needed, a player who could take up a role in defence or use his muscle as a protective barrier in midfield. Instead of shelling out on Martinez’s €40million release clause, they, ironically, went down the Arsenal route and saw a cheaper alternative at the Emirates. It fed into Song’s already inflated ego, and you really were keen to see the outcome of his attitude mixed with the strict and disciplined approach at the Barcelona training ground.

It’s for this reason that Arsene Wenger is so reluctant to sign former players. While it has been encouraged in the past with one or two names, on the whole the manager has got it right in not allowing players such as Alex Hleb an opportunity to really get their career back on track. It’s a simple matter of the players abandoning Arsenal after years or education, only to discover their complete misjudgement of both the situation and themselves.

You can’t really make a strong claim that Song has a future in the Premier League after this season. He hasn’t been at his very best for a few years, and what exactly could he provide to clubs in England? The links to Tottenham were a little strange, not just because of the rivalry. Where does Song act as improvement over what they have, other than just providing depth?

The player has seemingly gone full circle, yet for slightly different reasons. Song was quickly labelled as a failed project well before the educating really began at Arsenal. He looked nothing of a player good enough for a top Premier League side, and now, while clearly having improved, is no closer to earning a place back among England’s elite.

A move to France may be on the cards for the player, and you couldn’t totally dismiss the idea of Song being sold to PSG this summer. He’s provided extremely little for what Barcelona needed of him this season, and his actions and behaviour have burnt the bridges of a potential move back to Arsenal.

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Amusing that Wenger suggested the player try another season with Barcelona after his disappointing first year. More than anything, it looked like a subtle hint that the door is firmly closed for a way back to the Emirates.

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HYS: Should Newcastle sign Kenedy or Ryan Bertrand?

According to a report in the Northern Echo, Newcastle United are ready to step up their bid to sign Chelsea loanee Kenedy on a permanent basis now that they have retained their Premier League status for another year.

The Magpies surpassed the magic 40-point mark when they beat Arsenal at St James’ Park on Sunday, meaning manager Rafa Benitez can now start planning for next season in the top flight, with 74% of fans on Twitter already saying they want Fernando Torres.

Kenedy has certainly been an impressive performer on the left-hand side since moving to Tyneside during the January transfer window, scoring twice in the 3-0 win against Southampton and providing assists in 1-1 draw with Burnley and the 1-0 success against Huddersfield Town.

Meanwhile, The Sun reported on April 11 that the Toon were also keen on a move for 28-year-old Southampton defender Ryan Bertrand, who has been playing as a left wing-back in recent weeks.

While Kenedy has been playing as a left midfielder under Benitez, it is difficult to see that they would need both him and Bertrand given they already have Christian Atsu and Jacob Murphy that can also play on the left flank, meaning it could come down to a choice between the two.

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So, Newcastle fans, if the club could only sign one of Kenedy or Bertrand this summer, which one would you choose? Let us know by voting below…

Why Roy has made a massive mistake with this Southampton star

When Roy Hodgson released his squad for England, it was always going to be cause for debate, regardless of who was chosen. But one noticeable absentee was Southampton’s Ryan Bertrand.

He didn’t even barely miss out on being called up, he was one of the last resorts it seemed. Should Ryan Bertrand be England’s starting left-back?

Ryan Bertrand has had a good season, he has been solid in the back for Southampton in the Premier League. He has two goals and two assists for this season.

His average passing accuracy is 80%. Despite his form of the season, he missed out on being called for England. The ‘one season wonder’ argument is valid for Harry Kane, but not Bertrand: why?

Leighton Baines is the first choice under Roy Hodgson, who also has two goals to his name for the season. But Baines boasts a higher average pass accuracy than Bertrand at 85%.

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The Everton defender was included in Hodgson’s 23 man squad for the World Cup, but at 30-years-of-age, he may not be featuring in many more international competitions.

Ryan Bertrand did feature against Italy in Turin, being subbed on to replace Kieran Gibbs. If his current form is justifiable for a call up, then Hodgson has it all wrong. Gibbs has played fewer games than Bertrand, and hasn’t found the back of the net for Arsenal.

Luke Shaw had to withdraw from his England duty due to injury, but he himself is not having a stand-out season. He joined Manchester United in the summer, and has been hit with a fair few injuries throughout the domestic season.

Shaw has made only 13 appearances – half that of Bertrand – and also hasn’t managed to bag a goal for the Reds. Six years separate Bertrand and Shaw; Shaw has plenty of time to play for England.

So, should Bertrand be England’s starting left back?

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Based on this season, he should definitely be further up the list than Roy has him. Being overlooked can’t – and shouldn’t – be down to his club. If Fabian Delph can be included, given how Villa’s season is going, then surely so can Bertrand.

By including Ryan Bertrand in the Italy game, hopefully Hodgson is realising the error of his ways.

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Arsenal, Chelsea and et al…time for a wake-up call?

With Arsenal and Manchester United crashing out of the Champions League in the round of 16 to Bayern Munich and Real Madrid respectively, every journalist across the country has been asking anyone in English football who has an inch of clout, from ex-Liverpool coach Phil Thompson to Three Lions boss Roy Hodgson, whether the Premier League has lost its way, and will this be the end of the English game?

Last night, Arsene Wenger, defiant in defeat after the Gunners’ impressive but futile efforts to turn over a 3-1 defecit, claimed that Manchester City, Manchester United, Chelsea and Arsenal’s failure to impact Europe’s most prestigious competition this season was a “massive disappointment for English football…a massive wake-up call” and furthermore, “we accept the rest of European football has caught up with us.”

But is it really all doom and gloom? Should we really let one unsuccessful year dictate the state of the Premier League, despite the fact we are home to the reigning Champions of Europe, Chelsea FC? Or rather is it a case of taking a year out, or even just a campaign riddled with slight misfortunes for the English clubs, such as Nani’s now infamous red card.

Part of the logic behind the argument supporting the Arsenal boss’s claim is the poor showing at the top end of the Premier League table this year. With the title race very quickly becoming a one-horse affair as Manchester City and Chelsea struggle for form, Manchester United didn’t need asking twice to take advantage of the situation and form a seemingly unbreakable lead on their rivals, creating a 12 point gap between themselves and second place.

In my opinion, the Premier League title was already decided when Arsene Wenger allowed Robin Van Persie to leave for Old Trafford in the summer, but it is certainly true that although the Red Devils have played well and deserve their credit for producing some exciting football along the way, the rest of the Premier League elite have hardly risen to the challenge.

But to declare the English game is in disarray is rather short-sighted, and ignoring the cases of each particular club. Manchester City have struggled with the inevitable burden of being reigning champions for the first time. It’s an experience none of the squad have had before, and the situation wasn’t improved by some the mild calibre of reinforcements brought in during the summer; Javi Garcia, Jack Rodwell and Scott Sinclair are all good players, but should they really be part of a title-defending side?

Similarly, the ticking time-bomb that was Mario Balotelli’s City career finally exploded, and there has been an overall struggle at the club to meet fans’ expectations. Samir Nasri, Yaya Toure, Vincent Kompany and Gareth Barry are still yet to find fifth gear this campaign, and it is now most likely too late.

Chelsea’s season was essentially over before it had started following the sacking of Roberto Di Matteo back in November last year. It was not the Italian’s departure that sealed their fate, but rather the appointment of Rafa Benitez, which would put the interim manager, the players, the owner and the club under constant media scrutiny with a new controversy or dramatic episode rearing its ugly head on a weekly basis around Stamford Bridge.

The Blues have lost out this season simply due to the club’s inability to find any stability on and off the pitch, and furthermore, the first-team is transitioning between two generations of players that are fundamental opposites; whilst the Old Guard pride themselves on their physicality and mechanical nature of their play, the new boys, such as Eden Hazard and Oscar, are all about technique, skill, flair and improvisation.

Meanwhile, Liverpool and Arsenal, two Premier League heavyweights and former members of the traditional top four, which Alan Hansen once declared would never be broken, have been suffering from their mistakes in the transfer market. Whilst the former can be accused of being rather over-zealous in their offers made for mainly English talent, the latter have been unambitious, and it has lead to the gradual depreciation of the first team. Although I have firm faith in Chelsea and Manchester City putting on a better showing next season, the problems at Anfield and the Emirates are structural, and will take longer to overcome – especially now that Tottenham have proved themselves as real contenders this year.

One can’t deny however, that defending has quite simply gone out of the window this year. It’s created some excellent episodes of Match of the Day, but it’s not hard to work out how English clubs have been caught out by their more clinical and defensively organised continental rivals, proven by some statistics provided by The Guardian calculating English teams have let in on average 1.4 goals per game in Europe this year, up from the 1.1 goals per game from last season, and the 0.89 from 2010/2011.

It’s not an institutional problem as such, but rather how the English game evolves in terms of cycles. Whilst this campaign, scoring goals has been the impetus – a characteristic personified most by Man United, who have three strikers capable of scoring at least 20 goals per season – that at some point will naturally shift back towards organisation and defensive stability, as soon as one club proves it is the most efficient way to win the title, just as Jose Mourinho did back in 2004.

Similarly, the Premier League’s reputation for being the best in the world is perhaps a case of hyperbole. Although we have the thickest spread of talent throughout the division, compared to the top flights of other European countries, I find it difficult to claim the title of being the world’s best whilst the two figureheads of World football currently, Cristiano Ronaldo and Lionel Messi, both ply their trade in La Liga. Furthermore, the startling ease at which the ex-La Liga cohort at Swansea City have took to the English game and performed well, without requiring time to acclimatise, should go some way to change English preconceptions about middle-order players from the Spanish top flight.

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The German League is also on the up. The rise of Borussia Dortmund in the Bundesliga has improved the whole division, and there is now considerable quality throughout. But to say that they have “caught up” with us would certainly be an overstatement. This season is the first year since 2001/2002 that there have been two German clubs in the quarter final stages. Furthermore, since 1996, English clubs have reached the quarter-finals 33 times, whereas Spain sits at 32, and Germany a long way off with 20.

Just as it would be wrong to base your opinions on Manchester City’s, Arsenal’s, Chelsea’s or even Liverpool’s future on one season alone, it would be wrong to judge the English game on the same premise. It is clear that this year represents a blip in form, with some transitions at domestic level affecting performance in Europe.

Manchester City, Chelsea, Liverpool and Arsenal have all had poor campaigns by their usual standards, and the Premier League’s most in-form team, Manchester United, that could have gone on to mount a serious challenge for the Champions League trophy, were eliminated from the tournament via a rather dubious refereeing decision. To truly discover whether English football is falling to the wayside,  it must be judged on a season in which our clubs are firing on all cylinders, and yet still come up short in Europe, not whilst our top teams are still getting their houses in order.

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Liverpool fans want to face Real Madrid in Champions League semi-finals

On Friday, Liverpool will discover who they will need to get past in order to reach the final of the Champions League.

Jurgen Klopp’s side earned their place in the final four with an impressive 5-1 aggregate victory over Manchester City.

Mohamed Salah was one of the stars of the show as he opened the scoring in a 3-0 triumph at Anfield in the quarter-final first leg, and netted a crucial away goal in the 2-1 victory at the Etihad Stadium.

On the night of Liverpool’s joy, elsewhere in Italy, Rome caused a huge upset by clawing back from 4-1 down to oust Barcelona from the competition.

The result was welcomed by supporters of the Merseyside outfit, not only because they will avoid meeting the Catalan giants, but because their former player Philippe Coutinho left Anfield in January to win more trophies at Barca.

The Brazilian was roundly mocked by Liverpool fans following the Spanish giant’s shock elimination.

More drama ensued on Wednesday night when Juventus came close to knocking out Real Madrid by going 3-0 up in the second leg.

However, a penalty kick from Cristiano Ronaldo in stoppage time meant that Los Blancos progressed 4-3 on aggregate.

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Liverpool will be joined in Friday’s draw by Roma, Real Madrid and Bayern Munich.

Fans have been having their say on who they want to meet in the semi-finals, and one club stands out…

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