Is Liverpool’s recent transfer approach a cause for concern?

The big transfer news from Liverpool ’s POV on Friday was the supposed phone call that Kenny Dalglish had made to Palace regarding Wifried Zaha. It had been rumoured for a couple of weeks that Liverpool had shown a tentative interest but with the news on Friday morning it would appear that the Liverpool manager was making a firm approach for the England U21 International.

I would be the first to admit that I know little of the player or his ability but I have heard positive things about him and that much is the promising aspect of the possible deal. The downside for me – as always, with British players – is the price. £10 million for a 19 year old with 2 U21 caps and less than 75 games in England’s 2nd tier does not represent good value for me. It is the same price that Demba Ba apparently has written in to his contract; it is more than Liverpool paid for Pepe Reina, Jose Enrique, Dan Agger, Martin Skrtel, Lucas, Charlie Adam , Craig Bellamy and Maxi Rodriguez. There is no doubt he has potential but we are paying a premium now for a player that might be good in the future, because you can guarantee he won’t go straight in to the first team. When you look around, there is any number of proven players – particularly abroad – that are available for little more than this that could make an immediate impact and in case the board and coaching staff haven’t noticed, with our players being banned left and right and dropping like flies, immediate impact would be more beneficial to us at the moment.

It is rumoured that we’re looking to sign Zaha as a striker, or at least a forward, as opposed to a winger. Which, given his 6 goals in 74 games for Palace, is a little concerning. Don’t get me wrong, if Zaha could be signed for £5 million or less, I would have no complaints. I am however utterly loathed to hand out so much money for a rough diamond, particularly one that is completely unproven in the position we’re apparently looking to fit him in to.

Another aspect of this is the amount we’ve paid for relatively unproven Premier League players, such as Andy Carroll and Jordan Henderson . Both have had small success before joining Liverpool but neither warranted the massive £51 million we paid for the two and neither have done much to justify the fee since they joined us. It is fair to say that players require time, particularly young ones. I was one of Lucas’s biggest supporters from the minute he joined and I was always imploring others to ‘just give him time’ because I could see something in him. I’ve heard others say the same of Carroll and Henderson, so I am prepared to give them both at least another 12 months to start showing something other than promise. But with the news of our solid interest in Zaha, you have to wonder whether we’re looking to build a team whose only attribute is just that: promise. You can’t win the league with potential and you can’t win cups either.

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Liverpool won a chess match against Manchester City on Wednesday night and the key to that win was experience, which the side Liverpool had on the field had in abundance. People these days laugh at Alan Hansen’s comments in the 90’s that ‘you can’t win anything with kids’ and point to United’s success with the likes of Beckham, Scholes, Giggs and the Neville’s. What people like to forget is that that team was based on the foundation of Schmeichel, Bruce, Irwin, Pallister and Keane. The also had Andy Cole and Eric Cantona, both of whom played more than 30 games in that particular title-winning season. So, in effect, Hansen has still not been proven wrong: you will never win anything with kids. Unless, of course, they are complimented with experience.

I can understand that we are investing in the future and I can only get behind that ideology but given that we’ve only signed one outfield player over the age of 26 so far under Kenny Dalglish and Damien Comolli (Bellamy doesn’t count, he was for free), from a total of 10 made in 2011, there is a worrying trend starting to show. You also have to worry about Kenny Dalglish’s future too because while NESV/FSG appear to be right behind the ‘youth first’ policy, they are also expecting success. With the money spent already, I can only imagine they will be extremely disappointed should we fail to qualify for the Champions League. And with another possible £10 million spent on more potential in this window, they may begin to wonder where their money is going.

I am not against signing players with potential, not in the slightest, I am all for it. However, that needs to be balanced out with signings of genuine, tangible quality now because success breeds success and if these young players we’re signing are around a squad that is failing year on year because of a lack of investment in experienced, talented players they are only going to suffer for it. And so will we. You also have to ask the question: if we are adamant that youth is the way forward, then why are we seeing glowing right-ups of Conor Coady, Raheem Sterling and Suso and then seeing nothing of them? And these players are not far off the age of Zaha and are probably better prepared for Premier League football, having trained and been primed at a top club.

If only we could look in to a crystal ball and see the future, we might know better whether the prices we’re willing to pay for these players is truly worth it, or whether we’re going to be rueing all of these expensive English signings for years to come.

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Article courtesyof David Tryer from Live4Liverpool

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Premier League preview: West Brom v Aston Villa

With eight games remaining in the season, Aston Villa and West Bromwich Albion were both within one point of the relegation zone.Fast forward four matches, and the duo is 12th (Villa – 41 points) and 13th (Albion – 40 points) respectively and eyeing off a top-ten finish in the English Premier League standings.

They will go head to head on Saturday at the Hawthorns.

While Albion are just six points above the drop, the number of teams in between Roy Hodgson’s men and 18th spot means they are all but safe in their promotion season to the English Premier League.

The Villans are seven points clear and will be relieved to have escaped the drop zone’s clutches, but there will be nothing spared when they meet their West Midlands rivals on Saturday.

The club has announced Gerard Houllier will not be back to coach Aston Villa again this season due to health reasons, but he would have reason to feel better with his side four games unbeaten since their humiliating derby loss to Wolves in March.

Albion’s form has been similarly resurgent under Roy Hodgson, with their only loss in their past four coming at the hands of Chelsea.

Win over Liverpool and Sunderland and a draw with Tottenham has virtually ensured the Baggies of Premier League football next term.

Aston Villa won the reverse fixture at Villa Park 2-1 in December, with Stewart Downing and Emile Heskey on target for the victors and Paul Scharner scoring a late consolation for Albion.

Baggies midfielder Graham Dorrans is likely to miss the remainder of the season with an ankle problem, while Pablo Ibanez will be absent with a hamstring injury.

Aston Villa’s only health concern is Houllier, who will be discharged from hospital in the coming days.

Rio Ferdinand ready to return to captain’s role

Manchester United defender Rio Ferdinand has no doubt that he will be handed the England captain's armband again when he finally returns to action.

Fabio Capello turned to Ferdinand after stripping John Terry of the responsibility last season following the Chelsea star's off-pitch antics.

However, when injury prevented Ferdinand playing in the World Cup finals in South Africa, Steven Gerrard was handed the role.

The Liverpool midfielder also skippered the side for this month's two Euro 2012 qualifying wins over Bulgaria and Switzerland and there have been calls for him to be handed the captain's armband on a permanent basis.

Capello recently said: "For me the performance of the player is important, not the armband. It is not a priority for me. The armband is not important."

However, Ferdinand, who is close to returning to action after a knee injury, expects to captain his country for next month's qualifier against Montenegro.

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He told The Sun: "I think Capello said that (I would be captain when I'm fit) a while ago. I think he answered it the last time the squad were together."Subscribe to Football FanCast News Headlines by Email

Manchester City fans reminisce about Kolarov following Serbian’s World Cup goal

Aleksandar Kolarov left Manchester City last year, but he remains loved by the supporters.

The left-back, who can also play in central defence, spent seven years at the North-West outfit before dropping down the pecking order under manager Pep Guardiola.

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Kolarov, who has won seven trophies including two Premier League titles in his professional career, moved to Roma last year.

The 32-year-old remains a prominent figure in the Serbia dressing room, and he is currently with his nation in Russia for the World Cup.

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On Sunday, the left-back put in a man-of-the-match display to help Serbia earn a 1-0 victory over Group E opponents Costa Rica.

Kolarov scored the only goal of the fixture as he struck from a free kick, which he bent around the wall and into the top corner.

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Unsurprisingly, City fans stood up and took notice of their former player, and some even called for the reigning English champions to bring him back.

Others just reminisced about Kolarov’s time at the club.

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Everton fans react as Cenk Tosun speaks out about being dropped

According to an interview with Turkish Football, Everton striker Cenk Tosun has spoken out about being dropped to the substitutes’ bench and when he expects to return to the starting XI, and Toffees fans have been quick to have their say on his comments.

The 26-year-old joined the Merseyside outfit in a £27m deal at the start of January but despite lining up against Tottenham Hotspur and West Bromwich Albion, he has found himself on the bench in their last three Premier League matches, and he was an unused substitute in the 3-1 win against Crystal Palace at Goodison Park on Saturday.

The centre-forward isn’t too concerned though and via Turkish Football, he said: “I did not play in the last game but it does not bother me.

“I am just focused on my game and training hard.

“I am going to be a lot fitter in a fortnight’s time and then return to the starting 11.”

Everton supporters took to social media to give their thoughts on his comments, and while one said “he’s going to do us proud with this approach”, another said “great attitude to have”.

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Here is just a selection of the Twitter reaction…

Everton boss to sign six new players in the summer

Everton boss Roberto Martinez is set on six new summer signings, after given a transfer kitty of more than £20m, to transform Everton into a European contender, Daily Mail reports.

The Toffees are currently only six points behind fourth place Arsenal, and with the Gunners facing Manchester City this weekend, Everton could cut it down to three with a win at bottom side club Fulham.

However even if the Merseysiders are to fall short, they are still likely to secure a Europa League spot and Martinez intends to sign six new players to cope with the demands of Europe.

The Spanish manager is looking to sign Romelu Lukaku on a permanent basis from Chelsea as well as making Gareth Barry also a permanent signing from Manchester City.

He is also looking to bring Jack Rodwell back to Goodison Park, who left for the Citizens in the summer of 2012 but has rarely featured for the Sky Blues.

“Whether we are in Europe or not is a big factor,” said Martinez.

“We’ve got money but I didn’t think spending in January was the right thing to do. If we get in Europe I think that makes a difference of six players

“You need around 27 players plus keepers for Europe. It doesn’t have to be 27 senior players, it can be young players too, but 27.

“We have identified what we need for next season in terms of the areas, and then you start working on your wish-list.

“If you get into the Champions League you can look for your number one choice. If not, you’re going to number four, five, six and maybe seven or eight.

“But we have got the money and it is there to be spent.”

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The significant impact it has had on the transfer market

The landmark court ruling involving little-known footballer Jean Marc Bosman back in 1995 at the European Court of Justice in Luxembourg is still being felt to this very day, but what exactly did it do for the game and what was it’s wider impact on the way that football is run?

The ruling itself stated that Bosman had been unlawfully barred from changing teams when his contract with R.F.C. Liège in the Belgian first division expired after the 1990 season. By coming to that decision, it essentially created freedom of movement laws for all professional footballers within the European Union, while also simultaneously knocking any sort of quota system that UEFA or the independent leagues tried to impose on its membership, such as the three foreign players per squad rule that was used back in Spain and Italy in the 1980s. It became clear, the power no longer resided with organisations or the clubs themselves, but the players.

It increased competitive balance and ensured that the game became something more than just what was traditionally concerned with a starting eleven and now the power of a squad with depth was vitally important.

The main criticism often levelled at the Bosman ruling it’s that while on the whole player power has risen, which has had an adverse effect on player and club relations in the past, that the power resides in the few and not the many that can afford to pay top wages to out of contract players.

That this then distorts the competition because it means that the few at the top get the best players on the cheap and has resulted in just 12 clubs winning Europe’s premier competition since its inception back in 1992 from just seven different countries. However, when you consider that Real Madrid won the old European Cup format five years on the trot between 1955-60 and that Ajax, Benfica, Bayern Munich, Inter, Liverpool, Nottingham Forest and Milan all managed to retain their trophy after they first won it, then it becomes clear that pwoer has always been centralised among the few rather than the many.

The Bosman ruling has seen several leagues such as the ones in England, Spain, Italy and most recently the resurgent Bundesliga in Germany become Super Leagues in a way and without a generational glitch in terms of an influx in talents, the smaller European leagues now no longer prosper in quite the same way when mixing it with the big boys. There’s unlikely to ever be another Red Star Belgrade nor a Steaua Burcharest.

Prior to the rule, a player could only ever move clubs if the one that had ownership over his signature agreed a fee with the prospective interested party. As such, dictatorships, presidents and club officials prevented Eusebio from ever leaving Portugal and Pele in his peak from leaving Brazil.

It’s also had an impact further down the leagues where money is tigheter. With player power rife, clubs higher up the ladder will always sign their key players to lucrative long-term deals to keep them right where they are, but all across Europe, this revolving door policy can often be more of a hindrance than it is a help and it’s hardly condusive to a settled side which often breeds success. It’s now near enough impossible to rise through the leagues and then go on to have a huge impact in the top division like it was in the past, and money plays a much bigger part these days than it ever did prior to 1995.

There’s also the consideration that while players like Sol Campbell, Edgard Davids, Gary McAllister and David Beckham have proved to be bargain signings simply because no transfer fee has ever had to be paid, it also offers clubs more freedom in their transfer dealings, no longer shackled by the pressure of a players fee and the debate over whether they may flop.

The obvious downsides of the ruling is that it’s created the millionaire culture which football has gone on to indulge today, making the selected few clubs richer while also protecting the egos of the industry. This mollycoddling has meant that football has increasingly moved away as the pasttime of the masses, and become more of an entertainment outlet worldwide than a purely sporting vehichle.

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At the same time, though, in no other industry of profession is loyalty demanded so quickly as it is in football. They have just as much right to move freely between jobs and pick where their futures lie just as much as a plumber or secretary does. The fall-out may be hard to bear for some, even overhwlemingly negative for others, but in the modern day, it’s a necessity.

Has the Bosman ruling been good or bad for the game on the whole? Name your favourite Bosman dealing below.

You can follow me on Twitter @JamesMcManus1

West Ham fans react to Dawson, Rondon links

According to club insider EXWHUEmployee, West Ham United are interested in signing West Bromwich Albion duo Salomon Rondon and Craig Dawson in this summer’s transfer window.

Rondon has been linked with a number of clubs since West Brom’s relegation from the Premier League was confirmed, and West Ham are believed to be very much in the hunt.

Dawson is also believed to be attracting a lot of interest, and it would not be a surprise to see the centre-back pitch up in the Premier League once again.

Tottenham Hotspur have also been credited with an interest in Rondon, who scored 10 times for West Brom last term despite their troubles.

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Dawson, meanwhile, has more than proved himself at Premier League level over the last few years.

The West Ham fans have been reacting to the claims that their club could move for the former Premier League duo in this summer’s transfer window.

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And it would be fair to say that a number have differing opinions. One thing is for sure though, if West Ham do not snap the pair up then another Premier League club will.

A selection of the Twitter reaction from the West Ham supporters can be seen below:

Man United fans want Milinkovic-Savic after poor display from Matic and Pogba

Manchester United midfield duo Nemanja Matic and Paul Pogba struggled in their side’s 2-0 defeat against Tottenham Hotspur at Wembley on Wednesday night, and Red Devils fans have urged the club to sign Lazio midfielder Sergej Milinkovic-Savic, rated at £49.5m according to Transfermarkt, in the summer as a result.

The duo started as the deep-lying midfield players in Jose Mourinho’s preferred 4-2-3-1 system, but they were overrun and lethargic against the likes of Christian Eriksen, Dele Alli and Son Heung-Min, with the former giving Spurs the lead after just 11 seconds.

Matic was also left on his own far too often as Pogba looked to break forward, and the Old Trafford faithful know who they want to see arrive at the club at the end of the campaign to solve the issue – Milinkovic-Savic who has been an impressive performer for the Serie A outfit with nine goals in 29 games this season.

Man United supporters took to social media to give their thoughts on the situation, and while one said “this game was a clear reflection of why United need to sign Sergej Milinkovic-Savic in the summer”, another simply said “Matic out, Mili-Savic in”.

Here is just a selection of the Twitter reaction…

Tottenham to swoop for American ace

Tottenham are considering a move for Roma’s American midfielder Michael Bradley, according to the Daily Mirror.

The Italian giants have recently completed the signing of Belgian midfielder Radja Nainggolan, which could see Bradley made surplus to requirements.

The 26-year-old is currently behind the likes of Kevin Strootman, Miralem Pjanic and Daniele De Rossi in the pecking order at the Stadio Olimpico, and could look for a January move following the arrival of Nainggolan.

This could alert Tottenham and their Technical Director Franco Baldini, who took Bradley to Rome in 2012.

Bradley has previously played in the Premier League, where he had an unsuccessful loan spell with Aston Villa.

London rivals Fulham have also been linked with a move.

Tottenham could be in the market for a new midfielder, following the news Etienne Capoue could be on his way out of White Hart Lane, less than six months after signing.

The French midfielder has failed to impress during the first half of the season, and has often been played out of position at centre back.

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Napoli are reportedly ready to test Tim Sherwood’s desire to keep the midfielder, after manager Rafael Benitez missed out on moves for Lyon’s Maxime Gonalons and the previously mentioned Nainggolan.

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