Thursday, 18 January 2018

Man City have moved the goalposts for Man Utd, says Craig Bellamy

The goalposts have been moved for Manchester United because of Manchester City's dominance and identity, insists Craig Bellamy.
City are 12 points clear at the top of the Premier League, and have looked in scintillating form this season - Pep Guardiola's second in charge at the Etihad.
Speaking on The Debate, Bellamy insists United now have a long-term issue in City, who have forged an identity under Guardiola, and says fans at Old Trafford may have more City dominance to stomach in the future.

 

"I've always said the biggest problem he (Jose Mourinho) has is Man City next door. Mourinho has a problem with Pep Guardiola, and he will have that problem as a manager.
"As a team, Man Utd fans watch Man City and think: 'Why aren't we doing this? We've been doing this for years!' Will they be able to come to terms with them playing like that? I don't think they'll ever be able to come to terms with that.
"It helps having a lot of money, but whatever you have, Man City will have more. The goalposts have changed for Man Utd now.
"Man City now have an identity, a structure, a way of playing, this is what they do now. And now they're having success off the back of it. Very rarely have Man Utd fans had to see that."

Mourinho's United won the EFL Cup and Europa League last season, qualifying for the Champions League in process, which many saw as a big success in his first campaign in charge.
Also speaking on The Debate, Dennis Wise believes Mourinho has made United much stronger overall, and will continue to spend to improve the side and compete with Man City.
"Jose has done a great job so far. I do. Going in there, the situation before they were really struggling, needed an impact, and Jose has given them that.

"He goes in, wins the League Cup, wins the Europa League and gets them into the Champions League. You want to see Man Utd there.
"He came in there, won trophies, and has made the group better. They play slightly different, the way he likes to play, with power and strength, slightly direct at times. He's spent a lot of money, I get that, but I think they're sitting in a very good position at the moment.
"I think he'll buy again and again, and make them stronger. I think he takes a lot of pressure off his players, and has this way with the media, where the attention is on him. He's very clever like that."

MNF Extra: What’s going wrong for Alvaro Morata at Chelsea?

Alvaro Morata endured another difficult night as he was sent off in Chelsea's FA Cup tie against Norwich. With the help of Jamie Carragher, we explore the reasons for his dip in form after such a strong start and why Chelsea supporters should keep faith in the forward.
If there were doubts over the £75m fee that Chelsea paid for Alvaro Morata, there was also excitement. "I had seen enough over the years to know he was a good striker, albeit just below the absolute top level of strikers in world football," Jamie Carragher tells MNF Extra.
"But there is a dearth of great ones in the game right now. That is why Morata cost so much and that is why Chelsea got him. I felt this was a move that would put him in that top bracket if he did as well as I expected and he certainly started very well."
Morata scored six goals in his first six Premier League appearances following his move from Real Madrid. Having scored his 40 career goals in Serie A and La Liga at a rate of one every 127 minutes, this further encouraged the idea that he just needed more time on the pitch.
But Morata went off injured during the first half of Chelsea's home defeat to Manchester City in the very next game and his record since then is less impressive. The Spaniard has scored only four goals in his last 14 Premier League appearances for Antonio Conte's side.
He has been criticised for missing chances. Most notably, there were three one-on-one opportunities spurned in the 2-2 draw with Arsenal at the Emirates Stadium earlier this month. It was not the first time that Morata's profligacy cost Chelsea points in a big game.
According to Opta, the Chelsea striker has the worst big chance conversion rate of the eight players to reach double figures for goals in the Premier League this season. Alarmingly, he has scored only one of six such opportunities in games against the top six teams.
"I have read that he is a deep thinker about the game who gets frustrated, so perhaps that is why he is snatching at chances," says Carragher. "He has struggled in front of goal when he has had a bit too much time to think. That is something that he has got to work on."
Conte himself has also expressed his concerns about Chelsea's record in front of goal, understandably so given that no team has a better defensive record. "We are not showing great quality in our finishing," he said recently. "This is the truth." But is it the whole truth?
As well as being accused of missing too many chances, there are also concerns that Morata does not get enough of them. Against Leicester last time out, he did not have a single shot. It is not clear that Chelsea's setup is designed to get the best out of their record signing.
Morata has scored six headed goals this season - more than any other player in the Premier League - but four of them came courtesy of Cesar Azpilicueta. Chelsea do cross the ball but with Eden Hazard just off Morata, Conte is now opting for a system without genuine width.
"The goals he has got this season show how good he is in the air and Azpilicueta has been a revelation," says Carragher. "That is an added bonus that Morata maybe would not normally be getting from a centre-back stepping out. He has certainly gained from that.
"But when you are playing three at the back you are not playing with wingers who you'd think would naturally cross the ball. In Marcos Alonso and Victor Moses they still have players who get to the byline but not as much as a traditional wide-man would."
But perhaps the biggest problem for Morata is not his finishing or the service. It is the fear that extrapolating his scoring rate over a full season overlooked the strain that those added minutes on the pitch would bring. The real concern now is that Morata has hit the wall.
"I think it is a massive factor," says Carragher. "Normally he is probably sunning himself somewhere in the winter break and that's a problem. It's not just physical but the mental side too. He may be mentally tired with this being his first year in the Premier League.
"When you look at his career record, he has not played a great deal of football really. At both Real Madrid and Juventus, he very rarely completed the full 90 minutes in games so he is going to have to get stronger the longer he is in the Premier League."
It is not just that Morata has already played more minutes in the current campaign than he has in any other season of his top-flight career. It is that he is having to keep going for longer too. He has played 75 minutes or more in 15 of Chelsea's Premier League games.


He had never previously stayed on the pitch that long for more than 10 league games in a season and there are signs that managing that workload is becoming trickier. The Premier League tracking data suggests that Morata's physical output has dipped.
During those first six games of the season, he was clocked as Chelsea's fastest player in three of them but that has only happened twice in the 14 games since. He averaged 59 sprints per 90 minutes in those early games but only 52 sprints per 90 minutes since then.
The indications are that he is feeling the effects of playing so often. "He is someone who relies on his sharpness," says Carragher. "He is not Diego Costa or Didier Drogba. He does not have that physical frame that can put up with those knocks every three days."


So what is the solution? Could Morata rediscover his best form when used in rotation? Would holding him back for Chelsea's bigger games pay off? "The problem that Chelsea have is that Conte has no faith whatsoever in Michy Batshuayi," says Carragher.
"If he had a good back-up striker then Morata could have been taken out of the firing line and come back fresher for the next game. But Chelsea are so reliant on him that when he is not there, they don't actually play with a striker, they go to the false nine with Hazard."
Morata just needs support. "I still think he is a very good player," adds Carragher. "There is no doubt about his quality or his class. He made a great start and with the quality of the players around him, he will come through this. Chelsea should not lose faith too early."




West Ham striker Andy Carroll not the answer for Chelsea, says Dennis Wise

West Ham United striker Andy Carroll does not suit Chelsea's style of play and the Premier League champions have better options available, says Dennis Wise.
Sky Sports News understands Chelsea have already contacted West Ham about signing Carroll on a permanent deal in the current window.
However, lingering questions over both Carroll's fitness and scoring record mean the 29-year-old is not the man to provide competition for Alvaro Morata in attack at Stamford Bridge.
"He is a handful on his day, he really is, but no I do not think he is to be honest (the answer for Chelsea)," Wise told The Debate.
"The reason being is he does not play enough games, he has had a lot of injuries. He is 29 years old and does not score enough goals and so therefore from that point of view, no.
"I think Chelsea like a striker who runs in behind and stretches teams and he will not be that person if they play with one up front, he will be more of a hold-up.
"And with the players that they have got, they come off more and they always need that one person who is really going to stretch (the opposition) to give them the space.
"Would Andy be satisfied going there knowing he will not be a regular and he will be a bit-part player? Maybe he would, but not for me."
Wise also thinks there are better alternatives than Carroll for Chelsea to look at to provide back-up for Morata, who is currently struggling for goals at the west London club.
"There are more out there that score more goals, as they will get a lot of chances in play, and really push Morata," said the former Chelsea captain. "And that is what he needs.
"And Andy won't push him as far because he will only play a certain amount of games and I think you want a player who is really going to push Morata, score goals and put him under pressure."
Wise does admit he is surprised his former club have expressed an interest in the nine-cap England international, with the ex-Blues skipper likening it to when Chelsea bought Chris Sutton from Blackburn Rovers in 1999.
"He is not the type of player they go for, someone who is big and they stick crosses in because they are a little play around the corner and get it back and get in behind like that," said Wise, who made 445 appearances for the Blues between 1990 and 2001.
"His link-up play is not the greatest and they need someone up there who can link things who you have to go into him.
"We had Chris Sutton who was that type of big, strong… and his link-up play was not great and he really struggled at Chelsea unfortunately.
"And I find Andy a bit like Chris and we had a lot of ball players at the time - get it and get in behind and play - he is a bit like him.
"It did not really suit. And I do not think he will link up very well."



Arsene Wenger confirms Alexis Sanchez, Henrikh Mkhitaryan swap deal likely to happen

Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger says Alexis Sanchez's move to Manchester United is "likely to happen" in the next 24 hours, with Henrikh Mkhitaryan coming the other way.
Wenger also confirmed Mkhitaryan's wages will not be a problem in the potential swap deal and the Armenian is seen as a direct replacement for Sanchez, who is out of contract at Arsenal in the summer.
"I've worked on transfers for 30 years so it is likely to happen but any moment things can break down," Wenger said.
"That's how the transfer market is so as long as it's not over the line you have to accept that it can as well not happen. These kinds of things are never guaranteed."
When asked whether Mkhitaryan was involved in the deal, Wenger said: "My understanding is yes. The wages would not be a problem.
"Of course [I like him]. If it's a possibility it's because I like the player.
"We played many times against him when he was at Dortmund so he's certainly appreciated the quality of our games and the way we play football so that's why certainly he loves the club.
"This would be an exchange of players and I think one would replace the other. Are we still on the transfer market after that? Yes."
United are prepared to pay Alexis Sanchez more than £350,000 per week and Wenger revealed Arsenal "did the maximum the club could afford" to keep the Chilean.



Alexis Sanchez's current deal at Arsenal expires in the summer
Alexis Sanchez's current deal at Arsenal expires in the summer
"I wouldn't like to come out on the numbers because that's Man Utd's problem," the Frenchman said. "I respect Man Utd because they generate the money they pay to the players with their own resources so you have to respect that.
"After that it's down to them to know how much they want to give to the player. Overall Man Utd are a club very well managed financially and of course as well on the pitch so that's why I don't have any problems with the money they pay.
"He's 29 years old so the next contract will be, of course, very important for him.
"We did the maximum we could afford to do and one day maybe I will come out on that but today is not the moment."



Arsene Wenger signed Alexis Sanchez for £35m from Barcelona in the summer of 2014
Arsene Wenger signed Alexis Sanchez for £35m from Barcelona in the summer of 2014
Manchester City made a £60m Deadline Day move for Sanchez last summer, however, the deal collapsed when Arsenal were unable to sign Thomas Lemar as a replacement from Monaco.
"The problem was exactly similar to what it is today," Wenger said. "I only accepted to let him go if somebody comes in for him and it was not possible in the summer.
"I would have done it but because it happened very late on the last day of the transfer market, that's why it didn't happen. If it happens now it's because somebody else comes in for him."



Sanchez has scored seven Premier League goals this season
Sanchez has scored seven Premier League goals this season
Wenger also revealed further why Sanchez did not travel with Arsenal for their 2-1 defeat at Bournemouth on Sunday.
"When I left him out at Bournemouth it's because I was scared that we sit at Bournemouth on Saturday night and the transfer happened," he said.
"It was already quite advanced so I didn't want to be in a position where I travel with him and he has to go back and doesn't play."

Lambert key as Stoke closing deal for Augsburg fullback Stafylidis


Stoke City are finalising the signing of Augsburg left-back Kostas Stafylidis.
The Sentinel says Potters boss Paul Lambert has used his connections in Germany to move to the head of a queue with a loan move for the 24-year-old Greece international, who had already been linked with Roma and Fiorentina this month. The deal will be confirmed today.
He has not made an appearance since November but could be in line to make his first outing as Stoke take on Huddersfield at home on Saturday.
Stafylidis had been a key player at Augsburg last season but, as a late summer transfer to Hamburg was stalling, Philipp Max took his chance at the start of this term – and has quickly emerged as one of the best attacking full-backs in the Bundesliga.

Read more at http://www.tribalfootball.com/articles/lambert-key-as-stoke-closing-deal-for-augsburg-fullback-stafylidis-4216304#78r0Eap3TT4qrKCs.99

Heung-min Son only thinking of long-term Spurs stay

Heung-min Son sees himself long-term at Tottenham.
The attacker admits he is eyeing off a raft of club records.
The South Korean scored for a fifth consecutive home league game, a feat only previous achieved by Jermain Defoe in 2004, to be named man of the match as Spurs thumped Everton 4-0 at Wembley.
Asked if he is in the best form of his career, Son told the club's official website: "I don't know...I hope it gets better than now.
"I just want to try. I don't want to think about it too much. I want to enjoy this moment.
"Of course, I want more, like Harry Kane. He beats every record and I want to beat every record as well. I want to try to be a top player.
"I enjoy playing for Spurs and trying to help my team-mates and show performances for the fans, without their support or my team-mates, nothing is happening."

Read more at http://www.tribalfootball.com/articles/heung-min-son-only-thinking-of-long-term-spurs-stay-4216311#ZOiJifllGbZPwWvX.99