Tuesday, November 14, 2023

Latest Football Transfer News

Tottenham and Brazil forward Richarlison, 26, and Manchester United's English winger Jadon Sancho, 23, are January targets for the Saudi Pro League. 

Juventus are also interested in signing Sancho but only on a loan deal and with United paying part of his salary. 

However, United are not ready to give up on Sancho by allowing him to leave in the January transfer window. 

England right-back Reece James, 23, remains fully committed to Chelsea despite the interest from Manchester City and Real Madrid. 

Manchester United bosses are refusing to meet agents if they believe they are trying to pitch clients to replace Erik ten Hag as manager. 

Corinthians' 18-year-old Brazilian midfielder Gabriel Moscardo, who has attracted interested from Arsenal and Barcelona, says Chelsea were keen to sign him in the summer. 

Real Madrid have added Germany midfielder Florian Wirtz, 20, Netherlands defender Jeremie Frimpong, 22, and Nigeria striker Victor Boniface, 22, from Bayern Leverkusen to their transfer shortlist. 

Barcelona are still open to selling former Leeds United winger Raphinha, 26, next summer, and hope top European clubs will bid for the Brazil forward.  

Real Madrid are ready to extend 25-year-old Brazil defender Eder Militao's contract until at least 2028.

Brighton have brought Republic of Ireland striker Evan Ferguson, 19, in line with other top earners at the club with his new six-year contract. 

Bayern Munich president Herbert Hainer says they have no interest in selling Canada left-back Alphonso Davies, 23, amid transfer interest from Real Madrid. 

Croatian and former Marseille manager Igor Tudor, 45, is favourite to replace 59-year-old Frenchman Rudi Garcia as Napoli boss. 

Naples-born former Italy defender Fabio Cannavaro, 50, is also in the frame to replace Garcia. 

Sunday, November 5, 2023

Marcelo's Fluminense wins the Copa Libertadores for the first time in their history



Marcelo called Fluminense's success in the Copa Libertadores final on Saturday the biggest title of his career, ahead of Real Madrid's Champions League wins.  

Rio de Janeiro-based Fluminense, Marcelo's boyhood team, claimed its first title in the CONMEBOL South American club competition after a feisty 2-1 win over Argentina's Boca Juniors after extra time. 

The Brazilian left-back, 35, won five Champions League titles with Real Madrid during a distinguished 15-year career with the Spanish giants, but revealed that this one meant more because of his boyhood attachment to Fluminense. 

Marcelo told ESPN: 'Real Madrid will understand. It's my most important title, at club level, because it's the club that raised me.

I'm winning a very important title with my favourite club, the club that gave me all the tools to have my career, with the employees who saw me grow up. There's nothing more rewarding than that. It's priceless.

'I owed a debt to Fluminense. It was written [that we would win the trophy. There's nothing else to say. 

'Many people criticised us, but today Fluminense is the Copa Libertadores champion. ... Earlier I was crying, I was nervous, but now it is all about happiness.' 

Marcelo started as a youth player at Fluminense in 2002 before breaking into the first team.

In 2007, he moved to Real Madrid, where across a decade and a half, he won five Champions League trophies, six LaLiga titles, five Spanish Super Cups, four Club World Cups, three European Super Cups and two Copa del Rey trophies.

After leaving Spain last year, he had a spell with Greek side Olympiacos, before returning to his boyhood club in Rio in February. 

Marcelo started Saturday's final, and was substituted at half-time when Fluminense were 1-0 up courtesy of German Cano's 36th minute goal.

Boca Juniors' Luis Advincula equalised 18 minutes from time to send the game to extra time.

It is the 13th international title Marcelo has won in his illustrious career, moving him joint eighth in the list of players with the most global titles, level with Lionel Messi, Cristiano Ronaldo and others. 

Credit: Daily Mail


FORMER Manchester United star Marouane Fellaini is set to retire from football.


Fellaini starred for the Red Devils between 2013 and 2019, making 177 appearances.

But now, after spending five years with Chinese Super League club Shandong Taishan, he is set to retire this weekend, according to manager Choi Kang-hee.

Speaking in the pre-match press conference to the season finale against Henan FC, Choi - as reported by Chinese news agency Xinhua - said: "Though with some regret, I respect his decision to retire.

"He is a very great player.

"Maybe due to his age, his every post-game recovery was rather painstaking, which usually took one day or two."

Fellaini, now 35, has made 137 appearances for the Chinese outfit, scoring 50 goals.

He lifted the Chinese Super League in 2021 and won the Chinese FA Cup three years running from 2020 to 2022.

Shandong will hold a ceremony following the match on Saturday to pay tribute to Fellaini.

His time at Man Utd also saw him win four trophies.

Credit: The Sun 

Wednesday, November 1, 2023

5 players Jose Mourinho failed to get the best out of: Salah, De Bruyne…

Jose Mourinho has a reputation for being one of the most ruthless managers in football and stars from Chelsea, Manchester United and Inter Milan couldn’t cope with his tough love.

Of course, the Portuguese boss is one of the most successful managers of his generation and while he’s not everyone’s cup of tea, we wouldn’t have him any other way.

We’ve looked back throughout Mourinho’s managerial career and have picked out eight players who he failed to get the best out of.

Mohamed Salah

Letting Salah slip away from under his fingertips has to be one of the biggest missteps in Mourinho’s illustrious career. The Egyptian winger struggled to make an impression at Chelsea under Mourinho and John Obi Mikel recently revealed he reduced Salah to tears at one point.

“They were so unlucky that the boss, Mourinho, then didn’t take any prisoners,” Mikel said on The Obi One Podcast.

“If you weren’t doing your job, it didn’t matter who you were, he would have a go at you.

“He had a go at Mohamed Salah at half-time once and he was in tears crying. We thought ‘OK, he’s going to let him back on the pitch’ but then he destroyed the kid and then pulled him off.”

Mourinho never saw the potential in Salah and it’s fair to say things worked out for the best in the end. After regaining his confidence in Italy, Salah returned to the Premier League like a new man with Liverpool in 2017 and the rest is history.

Paul Pogba

To be fair to Mourinho, it can be argued that several United managers struggled to get the best out of Pogba. However, given Mourinho’s spikey personality, he was always going to but heads with the Frenchman at some stage.

The former United boss allegedly called Pogba a ‘virus’ which obviously didn’t go down too well. They also clashed in 2017 after Mourinho was unhappy with Pogba travelling to Miami while recovering from an injury.

“It all started when I got injured,’ Pogba said in his Amazon Prime documentary. “I decided to go to Miami for rehab and left. In Miami a paparazzo photographed me with my wife Zulay.

“Mourinho sent the photo to Raiola. I didn’t like it at all… at all. I said to Mou, ‘are you serious? I am injured, but I come here to train three times a day. Who do you think I am? I’m not like other players’.”

Kevin De Bruyne

Considered by many as the best playmaker of his generation, it still remains a mystery as to why Mourinho never gave De Bruyne much of a look in at Chelsea.

“I never went to Jose Mourinho. I trained hard; I showed enough. But it’s a football myth that if you train well, you get chance,” De Bruyne explained.

“That is not true. I left it hanging a bit because I didn’t see a chance to play anymore, but then I learned to behave differently sometimes. And that you can get out of such a situation. But I didn’t see that then. I just wanted to leave. And I don’t hate Mourinho either, I’m not a little kid. It just didn’t work out then”

Andriy Shevchenko

Shevchenko had his moments in a Chelsea shirt, but his spell at Stamford Bridge was largely underwhelming. Mourinho shunted the Ballon d’Or winner out wide to accommodate Didier Drogba and it wasn’t long until the pieces started to fall apart.

In some ways, Shevchenko was partly responsible for Mourinho’s first dismissal at Chelsea.

Dele Alli

The former Tottenham midfielder played his best football under Mauricio Pochettino, but Mourinho struggled to get that same spark out of him. A clip of Mourinho calling Alli ‘lazy’ went viral in 2020, but Alli has since added some context to the situation.

“That ‘lazy’ comment, people love to bring that up,” Alli said on The Overlap. “That interview on Amazon, he called me ‘lazy’. That was the day after a recovery day. A week later, he apologized to me because he’d seen me actually train and play.

“But that wasn’t in the documentary and no one spoke up about that. In the team meeting he called me lazy, but one-on-one, I think it was on the pitch, he apologized for it. I didn’t think anything of it at the time because I know I’m not lazy.”


Credit: Planet Football