Catalan sports paper Sport claims that Barcelona forward and Cameroon international Samuel Eto'o (27) has decided to leave Barcelona after the events of the last months.
Monday, 7 July 2008
Eto'o will leave
DEBATE: Next season's defense
Did we get the right price for Deco?
Was 10 million euro° enough for former Barcelona midfielder Deco?
Asked about the transfer fee Chelsea paid for him, Deco said in an interview with Catalan radio station Catalunya Ràdio that the fee is the consequence of the statements made by the technical department and the board of the club:
"In a way, what has happened is the result of how they have dealt with the situation. If you say that you're not counting on a player, you cannot ask too much for him afterwards. On the other hand, if that wouldn't have been the case, Chelsea wouldn't have signed me."
Barcelona economic vice president Ferran Soriano said at a press conference that Barcelona has sold Deco for a good price: "The price that Chelsea has paid is the right price if you look at the value of the player, the fact that he's 31 years old and that we didn't receive other offers. If a player who we bought at the top of his game for 18 million euro, is sold after four years for 10 million euro, I think that's a success."
Barcelona sports director Txiki Begiristain agreed with that view: "Deco is 31 years old. He played at an incredible level the first two years but he wasn't that good during the last two. I sincerely think that 10 million euro is the right market price. Also because we only had an offer from Chelsea on the table.
If we would have received other offers, we would have been able to negotiate, although we knew that the player really wanted to go to Chelsea because of his good relationship with their new manager Scolari. We've reached the best deal possible, we're very satisfied with the great sporting benefits in the past and the good economic benefits now."
Read the complete Deco transfer story from the first rumours until the signature
Chelsea leads the race to sign Eto'o
Asked about the rumours linking him with a summer move to England, Barcelona forward and Cameroon international Samuel Eto'o (27) said in an interview with British tabloid The Daily Telegraph that he didn't yet take a decision on his future:
"All I want to do now is get back to where I was. I want to have a proper pre-season in which I can regain full match-fitness. That is the most important thing to me. Whether it will be in England remains to be seen, but I've always liked the idea of playing there. At this moment I just pray for one thing. I pray God will allow me to be fit and in the best condition to represent Cameroon in South Africa."
With Manchester United, Arsenal and Tottenham also seriously interested, the tabloid claims that Eto'o (27) looks on his way to Chelsea, where he would replace Didier Drogba.
2007-2008: The transfer fees
Barcelona proposed last week its economic balance for the 2007-2008 year. These are the official numbers of the transfer fees paid and received between 1 July 2007 and 30 June 2008.
TRANSFER FEES PAID
Milito: 17 million euro
Cáceres: 16,5 million euro
Piqué: 5 million euro
Pinto: 0,5 million euro
Gudjohnsen: 0,5 million euro variables (for qualifying for last season's Champions League)
Others (probably Barcelona B players): 3 million euro + 1,5 million euro variables
TRANSFER FEES RECEIVED
Deco: 10 million euro
Zambrotta: 9 million euro
Belletti: 5,5 million euro
Giuly: 3,2 million euro + 0,4 million euro variables (for Roma qualifying for last season's Champions League)
Maxi López: 2 million euro
Fernando Navarro: 1,5 million euro
Motta: 1 million euro
Hleb likely to leave Arsenal
Asked about the rumours linking Arsenal midfielder and Belarus international Alexander Hleb (27) with a summer exit to Barcelona (read more here), Arsenal president Peter Hill-Wood seemed to admit in an interview with British tabloid The Daily Telegraph that the player is unlikely to be at the club next season: "Hleb has made it clear he wants to go. I think maybe he will go."
Catalan sports paper El Mundo Deportivo claims that Barcelona is planning to pick up the contacts with Arsenal on the transfer of the Belarussian attacker later this week.
Hleb's agent, Uli Ferber, is quoted by tthe paper as saying that Hleb would like to join Barcelona but that everything depends on the clubs: "There are more clubs interested but until now Barcelona is the only one who has made Arsenal a formal proposal. The player thinks it's a good option. Barcelona is a big club and he's proud that they want to sign him. Now everything depends on Barcelona and Arsenal being able to find an agreement."
Silva feels comfortable in Valencia
Asked about the rumours linking him with a summer move to Barcelona (read more here), Valencia left winger and Spanish international David Silva (22) said in an interview with Spanish football weekly paper Don Balón that he feels comfortable in Valencia:
Barça B: Nolito (Ecija)
Sevilla sports paper Estadio Deportivo claims that Barcelona is interested in Ecija forward Nolito (20).
Barcelona would already have informed the third division team about their wish to start talks about a transfer. Because the transfer activity of Barcelona B has been suspended over the last weeks due to the vote of no confidence, no meeting has yet been held.
Barcelona wants to reinforce the Barcelona B team with more experienced players after the promotion to the third division. Therefore Barcelona would also be following Ecija right back defender Xisco Campos (25).
Read more:
Sunday, 6 July 2008
Giovani says goodbye (part 1)

What has caused one of the major talents of the youth academy to leave the club after just one year with the first squad?
I'm aware that I'm at a great club and that you have to be patient but I have reached an age at which I need to play on a regular basis if I want to keep making progress.
Barcelona did something to keep you here?
They tried to convince me, but the best thing was to leave.
Why does a young player with a bright future leaves Barcelona for only 6 million euro?
I don't know. And I don't really want to enter the economic issue.
You have some bad feeling about leaving?
Of course I have. I was here for six years, I had settled down here, my parents live here and my brother plays for Barcelona. How could I not feel bad?
What is the best you'll remember from this club?
A lot of things. I learnt a lot as a player and as a person. I got more mature. I lived moments that at my age are not easy to go through. I have to thank the people who, maybe unconsciously, have teached me how to deal with difficult moments. Football is not sunshine every day and when I will again live a moment like that I will be able to stand up a lot quicker.
You sound like you have felt misunderstood at certain times and especially after the whistles in the Camp Nou.
Not misunderstood, but I would have liked... Let's see, when you come out to play and you have a lack of confidence... A lot of elements played a role... At a certain point, it seemed like people wanted me to play bad. That influences the choices you make on the pitch.
What do you think about the Barcelona fans?
They are great. I'm convinced of that. But mainly when the team plays well. Then they influence the rivals a lot. When things are going bad, it's all a bit special. But it always has been like that and I don't think it will ever change...
I suppose you also were partly to blame for what happened?
Of course. I wasn't the Giovani of the pre-season who played without any pressure and showed all his skills. Later I let things influence me too much. Because I wanted so much to show the world what I was able to do, I did things that I shouldn't have done.
In your last game, without the pressure you had felt along the season, you scored three times. You were yourself again.
I started well and I ended well. That game helped me to feel free again. I was very motivated to score and I scored goals that define me as a player. Yes, I was myself again.
We saw the real Giovani that day?
I think so. People who only know me from last season have another idea of me, but those who know me from the youth academy and from the national team know what kind of player I am and what I can do on the pitch.
You would like to return to Barcelona one day?
You never know what can happen in football.
Why did you prefer to leave on a permanent deal rather than on a loan deal?Because when I am somewhere I want to get totally involved without thinking the whole time about the fact that I have to perform well so I can return to Barcelona. I want to concentrate on and give everything for the club where I'm playing. Only like that you can give the best you have, without having your thoughts in another place.
What do you expect of the Premier League?
It's a league where the players are respected a lot and I look forward to start training and playing there.
You spoke with Tottenham manager Juande Ramos?
I did and he really is a phenomenon. I'm very motivated to start working with him.
How is your English?
Terrible! But I will learn.
The most interesting quotes of the interview he gave to Catalan sports paper El Mundo Deportivo will be posted on this blog next week.
Read the complete Giovani dos Santos transfer story from the first rumours until the official confirmation
Vote of no confidence
With a vote of no confidence against the current board, this is a historic day for FC Barcelona. Two conditions have to be met for the vote to succeed:
1) 10 per cent of the socio's should take part: this condition was already met with the vote being half-way
2) two thirds of the votes should be in favour of the motion (so against the current board)
When the vote succeeds, an interim board will be put in place and presidential elections will be held in the coming three months.
You can comment here on the vote and the result. The poll ends at 9 pm (local time). The result is expected to be known around 11 pm (local time). You can follow the election day on the club's official website
118.528 members, called to the polls
www.fcbarcelona.cat
An electoral roll of 118, 528 club members have been called to take part in this Sunday’s censure vote brought by the club members Oriol Giralt and Christian Castellví against the board of directors. You can vote from 9a.m. to 9p.m.
This Sunday will decide the immediate future of FC Barcelona. The 118,528 club members with the right to vote will decide if they support the motion of censure, which would mean the cessation of the whole Board of Directors and the convening of new elections, or, if they vote no this would allow the present Board to continue their leadership.
As on the 15th of June 2003 –the day Laporta took over as president-, the voting will take place on a day when no football is played. Even so, that day was the biggest electoral turnout in the club’s history.
Who will vote?
All of the 118,528 voters who meet the following conditions: they are of legal age and are not legally incapacitated, they have been members for more than a year, their membership is up to date and they are included in the current electoral census as stated in article 41.
This census consists of 78% men and 22% women. As for age groups, the most represented are those between 31 and 45 and from 46 to 65 years of age, with 32% each. The group from 18 to 30 and people over 65 make up 18% of the electorate each.
The majority of the people on the electoral roll are from the city of Barcelona (42%). Some 38% come from the province of Barcelona, whilst 8% come from the rest of Catalonia. Another 8% are from outside Catalonia but still within the Spanish state and only 4% are to be found abroad. In order to vote you must go to the Camp Nou.
Where to vote?
These members will have to go to the Camp Nou in order to vote. From 9 o’clock in the morning to 9 o’clock at night, there will be 120 tables prepared for the members to have their say. These tables will be located between the South goal, the wing and the North goal of the stadium. Every member, according to their surname, has already been allocated a table from which to make their vote.
The question in the vote of censure
At these electoral tables the members will find two pieces of paper. One will say ‘Yes to the vote of censure’, which would mean the cessation of the Board of Directors, which would mean calling elections. The others will have ‘No to the vote of censure’ written on them, which would mean accepting the continuity of the present Board of Directors, until the end of their mandate.
http://www.fcbarcelona.cat/web/english/noticies/club/temporada08-09/07/n080705104828.html
Ex-Barça: Geovanni to Hull City
Former Barcelona attacker Geovanni (28) signed yesterday a two-year deal with English Premier League club Hull City. The Brazilian player arrives on a free transfer since he was released from Manchester City earlier this week.
In an interview with the club's official website, Hull City manager Phil Brown said that he was delighted with the transfer: "The first time I watched Geovanni play was when he was at Barcelona in a game against Liverpool at Anfield. I've only just spoken to him about that particular match, which also featured the likes of Patrick Kluivert, Rivaldo and Luis Enrique. And to have someone from that fixture now playing for Hull City is a testament to just how far we've come as a club. I think it's a tremendous coup for the football club to have him on board."
Arriving from Brazilian club Cruzeiro, Geovanni joined Barcelona in the summer of 2001 in a deal worth 18 million euro. After one and a half year, he was loaned out to Portuguese club Benfica in the January transfer window of the 2002-2003 season. In the summer of 2003, Giovani was permanently transferred to Benfica.
Read more:
Ex-Barça: Fernando Navarro
Ex-Barça: Ruud Hesp
Ex-Barça: Fabio Rochemback
Negotiations on Hernanes in last stage
Catalan sports paper Sport claims that Barcelona has made on Tuesday a second offer for São Paulo attacking midfielder and Brazilian international Hernanes (23), who has a buyout clause of 25 million euro°.
Youth: Adria Carmona
Spanish football site Join Futbol claims that English Premier League club Tottenham Hotspur is closely following and preparing an offer for Juvenil B left wing attacker and Spanish youth international Adrià Carmona (16), who presented the new away shirt two weeks ago (read more here).
If Barcelona would not be willing to let the player go, Tottenham could even propose a loan deal giving Carmona, who was part of the Spanish team that won the European championship U-17 in May, the chance to gain experience in another league.
If -like it is believed- Carmona stays in Barcelona next seaon, the player is expected to be promoted to the Barcelona B team of Luis Enrique.
Read more:
Youth: Jonathan dos Santos
The 2008-2009 shirts
Tottenham was looking for Valdes agent
Where was Arshavin all those years?
Interesting article from British newspaper The Guardian about why it did take the west european clubs so long to discover the 27 year old Andrei Arshavin:
Luke Harding in Moscow - guardian.co.uk - Wednesday June 25, 2008
It has been one of the great enigmas of Euro 2008. Why has a forward of the quality of Andrei Arshavin, Russia's exquisitely gifted playmaker, not previously attracted international recognition?
Victory for Russia on Thursday night against Spain would be likely to confirm 27-year-old Arshavin as the player of the tournament. This would follow his pivotal role in Russia's 3-1 demolition of Holland during the quarter-finals and their 2-0 mobbing of Sweden.
In fact, Russian sports journalists identified Arshavin as a world-class player a long time ago - in 2004. But several factors conspired to prevent Arshavin from reaching his current inspirational greatness, they suggest. These include Russia's failure to progress at major tournaments.
A more profound obstacle has been Arshavin's immaturity or - as one observer put it - his propensity to behave "like a spoiled kid". "We started to talk about Arshavin when he was 23. He was playing for Zenit St Petersburg. It was already clear he was very talented," Anton Lisin, a journalist with Sovietsky Sport told the Guardian.
"He was driven. He was highly skilful. Technically he was a very good player. He could see the pitch. And he was an outstanding passer of the ball." The problem, according to Lisin, was Arshavin's erratic temperament. Born in St Petersburg, Russia's gritty second city, Arshavin grew up in a working-class Soviet family. His father was a gifted amateur footballer, but never quite made it professionally.
Aged seven, Andrei enrolled in St Petersburg's 'Smena' football academy. Contemporaries remember him as a slight, rosy-cheeked boy - with a preternatural ability to read and pass the ball. "Arshavin was always quite small. He didn't stand out. But as soon as he received the ball he was a totally different person," Sergei Gordeev, who coached Arshavin from the age of 11, said. "He was very good at draughts. Unusually for a footballer he had strong mathematical abilities."
He had also, improbably, managed to attend a technology and design institute in St Petersburg devoted to sewing. Here, he designed a range of sportswear. He later boasted that he enrolled on the sewing course because he was the only boy in a group of 20 attractive young women.
In 1999 Arshavin began playing in the reserves of Zenit, his local team, making his first-team debut in 2000 in an Intertoto Cup tie away to Bradford City. Zenit won 3-0.
At Zenit, Arshavin was among a nucleus of young, outstanding players who included Vladimir Bystrov and Alexander Kerzhakov. The three formed an exclusive circle. Arshavin was known as 'Shava', an affectionate nickname meaning little dog. "They were enfants terribles and rather stand-offish," Lisin said. "Nobody else could get close to them."
Tensions with Zenit's coach Vlastimil Petrzela saw Bystrov depart Zenit for FC Spartak. Kerzhakov pushed off to FC Dynamo. Arshavin, meanwhile, was passed over for Russia's national squad, and didn't take part in the 2002 World Cup in Japan and South Korea. Russia failed to qualify for Euro 2004, again depriving Arshavin of a chance to shine on the international stage.
Contemporaries suggest that Arshavin's self-confidence - at times bordering on arrogance - did him few favours. Critics accused him of laziness and lack of match fitness. They suggested he failed to help his defenders, often jogging back languidly from his opponent's goal.
In 2006 Dick Advocaat, Zenit's Dutch trainer, famously benched Arshavin and two other Zenit players after they went clubbing the night before a crucial game with FC Spartak. Arshavin's exile did not last long: he was swiftly recalled from the B-team.
But Arshavin reacted badly to the snub. "He basically behaved like a big child. He was disappointed by Advocaat's decision. His football suffered. He didn't have a good 2006 or early 2007," Lisin said. "Advocaat even remarked: 'I don't know what happened to Arshavin.'"
Others recall that Arshavin would behave disdainfully towards journalists. While other players would give interviews in the post-match 'mix zone', Arshavin would saunter past, munching an apple.
Ultimately, however, it was Advocaat and Guus Hiddink who proved the key to unlocking Arshavin's late-blossoming talent. Realising that Soviet-style coaching methods were not getting results, Russia's Roman Abramovich-backed football association sent for Dutch managers - in much the same way that Peter the Great sent for Dutch shipbuilders in the 17th century in an attempt to transform Russia into a great naval power.
The Dutch coaches injected a new seriousness and professionalism into Zenit - since 2006 backed by Russia's state gas juggernaut Gazprom. Gradually, Hiddink revolutionised Russia's national side. In 2007 Arshavin became Zenit captain. His late-discovered maturity may also have something to do with his personal happiness. He married his girlfriend Yulia in 2003, and now has two small children, Artyom, two-and-a-half, and Alina, two months.
There have been occasional flickers of Arshavin's former sulkiness. During Russia's Euro 2008 qualifier against Andorra, Arshavin got himself sent off for a reckless foul during a moment when it seemed England would qualify at Russia's expense. The red card meant he missed Russia's first two Euro 2008 matches - the 4-1 drubbing by Spain and 1-0 victory over Greece.
Latterly Arshavin has shone. He led Zenit to victory in the Uefa Cup final against Rangers and was crucial to Russia's 2-1 victory over England last October during the Euro 2008 qualifiers. In Austria and Switzerland, Hiddink has handled Arshavin to perfection, hinting before the tournament that Arshavin - now a national icon in Russia - might not play a part.
After the debacle against Spain, Hiddink opened up Russia's training session to the public. Angry Russian fans heckled the squad. The trick worked. He also roused the Russian team an hour earlier than scheduled for its encounter with Greece.
Today Zenit confirmed that Arshavin will almost certainly leave the club following Euro 2008. "If Arshavin feels he needs to bring on his career in one of the top footballing countries we will not stand in his way," Alexei Blinov, Zenit's spokesman, told the Guardian.
Arshavin has made it clear his preferred destination is Barcelona and La Liga. He is a passionate Barcelona supporter. Friends recall how as a teenager he would spend hours playing Football Manager on the computer – he would start by managing a fourth-division English club, but would inevitably finish as manager of Barca.
"As a boy his dream was to play for Barcelona. He worshipped Barcelona," Gordeev, his former coach, said. But with no offer from Barcelona so far, there is still a strong possibility that Arshavin could play in the Premier League. Arsenal, Chelsea and Manchester City are all reportedly interested in him.
And yet despite his superlative Euro 2008 run, there are still question marks over Arshavin's temperament. This may persuade top European clubs to modulate their offers for him - which are said to be in the region of €10-20m. As Lisin says: "During this tournament Arshavin has been like Cinderella. But nobody quite knows whether, when the clock strikes midnight, he will stay a princess or turn back into a pumpkin."
http://www.guardian.co.uk/football/2008/jun/25/russia.euro2008
Ezquerro still considering Olympiacos offer
Catalan sports paper Sport claims that former Barcelona left winger Santiago Ezquerro (31) is still considering the offer he received from Greek champions Olympiacos (read more here).
Saturday, 5 July 2008
Better contract for Messi
Catalan sports paper El Mundo Deportivo claims that Barcelona has offered Barcelona right wing attacker and Argentinian international Lionel Messi (21) a better contract (read more here).
Messi will now receive a year salary of 8 million euro, with another possible 4,5 million euro in incentives: the player receives one million euro extra if Barcelona qualifies for the Champions League, one million euro extra if he plays at least 60 per cent of the official matches and 2,5 million euro extra depending on the trophies won.
This pay rise doesn't mean that the duration or the buyout clause are changed: Messi's contract with Barcelona expires in 2014 and the buyout clause is 150 million euro°. Despite several tempting offers from other European top clubs, Messi has always shown the will to stay in Barcelona.
Barcelona economic vice president Ferran Soriano confirmed the contract renewal in an interview with Catalan radio station RAC 1: "We have adapted the contract to his performances."
Read more:
Record renewal offer for Messi
Russian energy company considering Messi bid
100 million euro Chelsea offer for Messi
Barcelona pushing hard for Adebayor
British newspaper The Guardian claims that Barcelona is preparing a final 38 million euro° bid for Arsenal forward and Togo international Emmanuel Adebayor (24).
A 30 million euro° offer made by Barcelona sports vice president Marc Ingla in London earlier this week was rejected. With the initial asking price being 45 million euro°, Arsenal made nevertheless clear that they are prepared to sell if the price is right.
Arsenal manager Arsène Wenger was initially opposed to a move but the mixed messages from Adebayor and his entourage about the future of the player and the difficult negotiations on a pay rise seem to have burnt the bridges between the player and the club. Wenger is understood to be disappointed by Adebayor's attitude and doesn't want to hold the player in London against his will.
Madrid sports tabloid Marca meanwhile claims that Barcelona sources have confirmed that the club has not yet made any formal bid for Adebayor so far and it is not planning to launch a bid before Eto'o has left the club.
Asked about how things stand at this moment, Adebayor's agent Stéphane Courbis has yesterday said in an interview with French football weekly paper France Football that at this point all options are still open: "At this moment, no decision has been taken and everything remains possible. Because there were too many things written lately, the player and myself will not speak with the press anymore at this stage."
Read more:
Adebayor cannot make his mind up
Adebayor main centre forward option
Hleb option falls back
Barça B: Gai feels ready for first team
Asked about the rumours that he could join the first team squad this summer (read more here), Barcelona B left wing attacker and Israeli international Gai Assulin (17) has said in an interview with Catalan radio station Ona FM that he feels ready to play with the senior team:
"I think that I have the capacities to play with the first team. So I just hope that they will give me the chance to prove that during the pre-season cause I know I will be able to take the chance if it's given to me."
If Gai would do the pre-season with the first team, that would mean that he would only have had two weeks off, since the training sessions start next Monday and after the promotion with Barcelona B Gai also played the final of the Spanish cup with the Juvenil A team last weekend.
Read more:
Gai Assulin will be promoted next season
Which B players could be promoted?
Ajax wants Gai Assulin on loan
Eto'o will only leave for the right price
Asked about the situation of Barcelona players Ronaldinho and Eto'o, Barcelona economic vice president Ferran Soriano has said at a press conference yesterday that the two players will only leave if an appropriate bid comes in:
"Selling players is not only a technical decision, it's also an economic decision. Barcelona will only sell Ronaldinho and Eto'o if the right market price is paid. If that's not the case, they will not leave. And like the coach has said before, we will then do everything to get the best out of them."
Madrid sports tabloid Marca claims that Barcelona will not make a formal offer for Arsenal forward Adebayor before Barcelona forward and Cameroon international Samuel Eto'o (27) has left the club.
Catalan sports paper Sport meanwhile claims that Eto'o wants to know as soon as possible where he will play next season. On Tuesday all parties involved could hold a decisive meeting to accelerate the negotiation process. Although he has several offers on the table, Eto'o would prefer to join AC Milan.
Read more:
Eto'o wants to talk with Guardiola
Chelsea offers Malouda in Eto'o deal
Portsmouth favourites to sign Gudjohnsen
Arshavin putting pressure on Zenit
Catalan sports paper Sport claims that Zenit Saint Petersburg forward and Russian international Andrei Arshavin (27) would not be wanting to play for Zenit anymore because the club isn't keeping the promise they made before that Arshavin could leave for 15 million euro°.
The paper says that the negotiations between Barcelona and Arshavin are well-advanced and that a deal with the player wouldn't be aproblem if Zenit accepts the 15 million euro° offer made by Barcelona.
Catalan sports paper El Mundo Deportivo claims that Russian champions Zenit are asking 25 million euro° for Arshavin. Chelsea would have offered 22 million euro and Barcelona 15 million euro° but both bids were rejected (read more here).
Zenit thinks that Arshavin is a star player and is therefore worth a lot more than players like for example Seydou Keita (14 million euro) or Martín Cáceres (16,5 million euro). Barcelona would nevertheless not move from its original position and hopes that the wish of the player in the end will be decisive.
British tabloid The Daily Express claims that both Barcelona and Chelsea have offered 15 million euro° but that the player seems on his way to Chelsea. Arshavin would have told his club Zenit that he wants to quit and join Chelsea. Chelsea expects Arshavin to arrive this weekend in London for talks with his agent Pavel Andreev.
Chelsea owner and Russian billionaire Roman Abramovich is determined to sign at least one Russian player this summer and would have visited the Russian team hotel during Euro 2008 to hold talks with Arshavin trying to persuade him that his future lies in London.
Britsh tabloid The Daily Mail also claims that Chelsea has moved ahead of Barcelona in the race to sign Arshavin. The player will arrive in London today and an agreement could be found this weekend.
Arshavin’s family would be trying to talk him into a move to the Premier League with his mother Tatyana and wife Yulia both said to believe it would be easier for him and his two children to settle in England rather than Spain.
Read more:
Bid for Arshavin rejected
Pavlyuchenko new name on striker list
Ezquerro close to joining Olympiacos
Ex-Barça: Luis Aragonés to Fenerbahce
Former Barcelona manager Luis Aragonés (69) has today been appointed as the new manager of Fenerbahçe. The Spanish coach, who led the Spanish national team to winning the European championships last month, has signed a two-year deal with the Turkish club.
Renewal offer for Xavi
Catalan sports paper Sport claims that Barcelona plans to offer Barcelona midfielder and Spanish international Xavi Hernández (28) a contract renewal in the next two weeks.
Getafe interested in Crosas
Madrid sports tabloid As claims that Primera División team Getafe is interested in Barcelona midfielder Marc Crosas (20), who played on loan with Olympique Lyon during the first half of this year and who can leave the club this summer (read more here).
Getafe, who expects that more clubs could join the race for the player soon, has already contacted Barcelona to hear more about the conditions of an exit. Getafe is willing to accept a loan deal or a permanent deal with a buy back clause
Getafe officials have already spoken with Crosas to explain them the the project. The Catalan midfielder wants to play in a top league next season and would prefer the Spanish Primera División over the French Ligue 1. The entourage of the player thinks that Getafe is a good option.
Friday, 4 July 2008
Talks with Ajax on Henrique and Oleguer
Dutch football site Europe Soccer claims that Barcelona is holding intensive talks with Dutch club Ajax Amsterdam on the transfers of Barcelona centre and right back defender Oleguer Presas (28) and Palmeiras central defender and Brazilian international Henrique Adriano Buss (21), who is expected to sign a contract with Barcelona in the coming days (read more here).
Henrique would join Ajax on loan while Oleguer could be loaned out or leave on a permanent deal.
Read more:
Ajax wants Oleguer on loan
Ajax confirms Henrique loan deal possible
Ajax wants Gai Assulin on loan
Bid for Arshavin rejected
Asked about the rumours linking Zenit Saint Petersburg forward and Russian international Andrei Arshavin (27) with a summer exit, Zenit general director Maxim Mitrofanov has said in an interview with Russian radio station Radio Zenit that Barcelona is the only club so far who has made a formal offer but that the Russian champions have rejected it and prefer to hold on to the player:
Asked about the rumours saying that Arshavin would fly to London to hold talks with Chelsea today (read more here), Zenit spokesman Alexei Blinov said in an interview with Russian news agency RIA Novosti that the club was unaware of that: "We saw the news but we have no information about that. Arsahvin took normally part in the training session today."
Zenit manager Dick Advocaat has said to journalists today that it's not yet sure what will happen with the player: "There's no final decision taken yet whether he will remain at the club or not. I expect everything to be clear and decided upon two weeks from now."
Final offensive for Arshavin
Van der Vaart would consider Barcelona offer
Asked about the rumours linking Hamburg attacker and Dutch international Rafael van der Vaart (25) with a summer exit, new Hamburg manager Martin Jol has said in an interview with the club's official website that the player, whose contract expires in 2010, would seriously consider a proposal coming from the Primera División:
Barça B: Chico could continue and be promoted
Cádiz local newspaper Diario de Cádiz claims that new Barcelona manager Josep Guardiola wants Cádiz central defender José Manuel "Chico" Flores (21), who joined Barcelona B on loan in January but has now still two years left on his contract with Cádiz, to take part in the first team pre-season (read more here).
Barcelona is expected to make a formal offer to third division team Cádiz soon. Chico's agents had a meeting with Cádiz officials last week during which the situation of the player was discussed.
Asked about the possibility of a permanent transfer to Barcelona, Chico said to the paper that he's waiting to see what will happen: "They have talked about the issue with me and of course I would like to do the pre-season and go to Scotland and the United States, but it doesn't depend on me. I thank Guardiola for the confidence but I still have a contract with Cádiz and if they don't want to listen to offers that could come in, I will have to accept that. It could anyhow be a somewhat turbulent summer because I could have several interesting options."
Cádiz local newspaper La Voz de Cádiz also claims that Barcelona is ready to start negotiating with Cádiz on a possible transfer of the central defender.
Asked about his situation, Chico said to the paper that he prefers not to return to Cádiz: "So far, it has been a wonderful year to me. My idea is now to try to take advantage of this season and to stay on this train, that comes by only once in a lifetime. With all the offers that I have on the table, I have to aim higher. But I know I still have a contract, so I hope to talk with the club after my holiday."
Madrid sports tabloid Marca claims that an option to buy Chico for 6 million euro° expired at the end of May. Barcelona let this deadline go by and would now come with an offer that is quite lower than that fee. The tabloid claims that Barcelona could buy Chico and then loan him out so he can gain some more experience.
Read more:
Which B players could be promoted?
Barcelona denies Valiente exit
Victor Sanchez ignorant on first team promotion
Silva not pronouncing on Barcelona interest
Asked about the interest of other clubs and the statements by Valencia president Morera that both he and David Villa will not leave the club this summer (read more here), Valencia left winger and Spanish international David Silva (22) said in an interview with Madrid sport tabloid As that his near future depends on Valencia:
First Tottenham training session for Giovani
Alves' first interview

New Barcelona defender Daniel Alves gave an exclusive interview to the club's official media. Some quotes:
How have you improved in your years at Sevilla ?
You get more mature and learn things. When you are young these things don’t even enter your head, you just want to play, it’s not important, but when you start looking back you realise just how much you have learned. Attacking is not enough, I think I have matured over time. Now I have found that balance in the way I play.
What convinced you about Barça?
The way they play. I have enjoyed the games I have seen. And their style of play also seduced me, and their aim to win titles, because I am also ambitious like that. The new club project and the faith they have shown in me helped me make my decision.
Do you feel more of a right back because you can influence the game from there?
I don’t think playing as right back is contradictory to playing football. I also like offensive football, it is the best thing about the game. I find the position comfortable, very normal. Also, when I started playing I always wanted to feel I was somebody that could bring something different and better to the game. And it is through thinking like that that I am where I am today, and I won’t change the way I think. Although I can adapt to any circumstances.
Perhaps when Barça plays a 4-3-3 system, you might have to play in right midfield. Well, I have the right characteristics, I’ll adapt to whatever is needed for the good of the team. I could open the pitch from that position.
Messi and you could make a great right hand side of the pitch.
Messi is an incredible player, very intelligent. If we understand each other well, I am sure the fans with be grateful for it.
What will you say to the fans?
What I can say is that I am a very hard working player. They say I change when I’m on the pitch. Off it, I’m laid back, but on it, I like to fight as hard as I have to. I am very excited about this new stage of my life and I am the first to want to win titles and to do that I want to try to contribute all I can.
Read the whole interview here
Read the complete Dani Alves transfer story from the first rumours to the official presentation
Read the first interviews of Seydou Keita, Gerard Piqué and Martín Cáceres
Ex-Barça: Mark Hughes to Manchester City
Former Barcelona forward Mark Hughes (44) has last month been appointed as new manager of English Premier League club Manchester City. The Welshman left Blackburn Rovers, where he was head coach over the last four years, to sign a three-year conctract with City.
Arriving in 1986 from Manchester United, Mark Hughes played one season for Barcelona. One year after his arrival, he was loaned out to German champions Bayern Munich and in 1988 Hughes was sold back to Manchester United.
Read more:
Ex-Barça: Fabio Rochemback
Ex-Barça: Frank de Boer
Ex-Barça: Víctor Muñoz
Shevchenko prefers to stay with Chelsea
British tabloid The Daily Star claims that the first option of Chelsea forward and Ukrainian international Andriy Shevchenko (31) is to keep on playing at Chelsea next season.
Thursday, 3 July 2008
Verbal agreement with Henrique confirmed
Asked about the rumours that Palmeiras central defender and Brazilian international Henrique Adriano Buss (21) is on the verge of becoming a Barcelona player (read more here), Barcelona sports director Txiki Begiristain has said at a press conference today that the transfer is not yet finalized:
"Henrique is not yet a Barcelona player cause nothing has been signed yet. We held talks and we reached a verbal agreement with the player. But there are still some paper issues with Palmeiras left and until it's not signed, you cannot announce anything. The idea is that, if the transfer is closed, the player will be loaned out."
Read more:
Last details of Henrique transfer being resolved
Ajax confirms Henrique loan deal possible
Berbatov if Adebayor situation remains unclear
Crosas can leave this summer
Asked about the situation of Barcelona midfielder Marc Crosas (20), who played on loan at Olympique Lyon during the first half of this year, Barcelona manager Josep Guardiola has said at a press conference today that he doesn't count on the player for next season:
"I have talked to him and informed him about my decision. We will try to find another club for him, so he can keep on playing somewhere else. If that's not possible, he will do the pre-season with us and will be a member of the squad."
Read more:
Crosas will start the new season in Barcelona
Crosas could stay in Lyon
Barcelona forgets about Crosas
Final offensive for Arshavin
Catalan sports paper Sport claims that Barcelona will launch today a final 15 million euro° offensive for Zenit Saint Petersburg forward and Russian international Andrei Arshavin (27). If everything goes like planned, the transfer could be closed before the end of this week.
Barcelona had already found an pre-agreement with Zenit before the European championships but the excellent performances of the player during the tournament and the interest of other clubs, have made the Russian club take a step back.
Catalan sports paper El Mundo Deportivo claims that because of the pre-agreement and the will of the player to join Barcelona (read more here), Barcelona is not willing to enter a bid race with other clubs. A few days ago, a deal seemed to be very close but the interference of Chelsea would have avoided that a deal was finalized.
The paper claims that Metallurg Donetsk vice president Dimitri Sellyuk, who is also the agent of Barcelona player Yaya Touré, has been appointed by Barcelona to act as intermediary between the clubs.
Asked about the negotiations, Barcelona sports director Txiki Begiristain didn't really want to enter the issue at a press conference today: "The club is working on several options. Arshavin is one of them but I don't want to say more about it, I prefer to talk about facts."
Zenit sports director Konstantin Sarsania is quoted by British tabloid The Daily Star as saying that Arshavin and his agent will meet with Zenit officials today: "On Thursday, players from the national team return to our training camp. Arshavin and his agent Pavel Andreev are to clarify their position with us then. We do not want to sell Arshavin. That’s exactly why we need Andrei to meet the bosses of the club: to understand what he is really after.
My understanding was that he would like to go and play abroad. But he isn’t only interested in moving to Barcelona. There’s also Chelsea. Andrei never rejected the idea of moving there. The Chelsea managers know the situation and have already talked to his agent."
British tabloid The Daily Mirror meanwhile claims today that Chelsea owner Roman Abramovich has found last night a deal with Zenit and that Arshavin will now fly into London for talks with the English Premier League club.
A source at Zenit is quoted by the tabloid as saying: "Chelsea have been in contact, a deal has been agreed and Arshavin will fly to London to discuss terms. He was very attracted by playing in Spain but feels English football would suit his style better. And with Roman Abramovich involved there is another link and reason."
Arshavin said yesterday to journalists that he wishes to leave Russia this summer: "I've been very happy at Zenit and I will always be grateful for the chances they've given me, but I would like to leave for another big club in Europe. There's nothing concrete yet, it depends on many things, but I hope a deal can be closed soon."
Read more:
Formal offer for Arshavin
Arshavin confirms that he is a Barcelona fan
Arshavin scouting report
Wenger critical about transfer market changes
With Barcelona still interested in Arsenal players Adebayor and Hleb, this is an interesting article from British newspaper The Observer on Arsenal manager Arsène Wenger's view on the transfer market:
Wenger sees 'the end of transfer fees'
Arsenal manager says the power has shifted from clubs to players
Duncan Castles - The Observer
Three decades ago, when Arsène Wenger was earnestly failing to establish himself as a professional footballer of note at Strasbourg, the financial dominion of clubs went without challenge. No player left a team without the express permission of his employers. A club owned a footballer's registration until choosing to relinquish it for whatever price they deemed fit. When neither a new contract nor a transfer could be agreed, clubs could lawfully prevent their employees playing for any other club without paying him another centime.
So effectively did football control the salaries of its performers that the €20m (£15.7m) a season Real Madrid are currently enticing Cristiano Ronaldo with would cover the wages of an entire league season of the Wenger era. 'Inflationary' is one term the Arsenal manager uses to describe the transfer system that lends Ronaldo the confidence to demand his exit from Manchester United one season into a five-year contract. 'The wild west' is another he employs to capture the actions of players, agents and predator chairmen in football's new order. Allow its logic to run the full course, he argues, and transfer fees may completely cease to exist.
Though the market has yet to reach the stage where Ronaldo is free to march off to Madrid without compensation for United, the combination of external temptation and personal desire bears parallel to Nicolas Anelka's move from Arsenal to the Bernabéu nine summers ago.
'Contract-wise, the club is always in a weaker position,' said Wenger of the Ronaldo situation at a Castrol-backed Euro 2008 event. 'Why? Because clubs only have the security of a player now for three years. And that's why, when a player is in his second year, it's difficult. You are in a weak situation as a club.
'OK, you can think, "I can leave this guy here if he sulks and play him in the reserves." But it doesn't work. It's a good solution in theory, but on a daily basis it's impossible. That's why, in the end, I said I will only sell Anelka if he says to me, "I want to leave". What can you do with a player who doesn't want to stay?'
The legal framework gradually structured around football since Jean-Marc Bosman successfully challenged restrictions on freedom of movement in 1995 means that, in many circumstances, a club can do nothing. In the wake of the European Court of Justice ruling, Fifa drafted a set of internationally binding regulations determining the maximum length of contracts, circumstances under which a player could terminate them and compensation levels for transfers.
Introduced in 2003 and restated two years later, Fifa's 'Regulations for the Status of and Transfer of Players' is a 38-page document of intentionally convoluted legalese. While the compromise deal prevented more hawkish European Union bureaucrats from abolishing transfer fees in their entirety and allowed clubs to continue signing footballers to multi-season contracts, the shades of grey of several central provisions have gradually become apparent to those intent on negotiating increasingly grand remuneration.
Critically, the Fifa regulations allowed a player who agreed his contract when under the age of 28 to terminate it after three seasons 'without just cause' as long as he informs his club of his intention to do so and pays appropriate compensation. Though the level of such damages went unspecified, the test case that followed Andy Webster's decision to use the rule to leave Hearts for Wigan in 2006 determined that sum as the outstanding value of a player's contract (in the Scotland defender's case, £150,000).
The result, according to Wenger, is that a modern footballer's contract effectively secures a player's services for just two seasons, regardless of the length formally agreed in the paperwork. 'After two years you have to renegotiate your contract because after three years the player can move out,' Wenger says. 'You give longer contracts because it offers a little bit of protection for the player to have to pay compensation if he moves after three years - if you give a player a five-year contract and he moves after three, he has to pay two years' [wages].
'But, after two years, you have to re-negotiate with the player because he can move the next season; you have no choice. For me, this measure is inflationary. Why? Because after two years you have to sit down with the player, whether he has played well or not, or you will lose him. You can never get him to sign an extension to his contract for less - that means you will always have to increase his salary. They have created a situation where inflation goes through the roof.'
If that places in perspective Arsenal's claim that they tied Cesc Fábregas to a revised eight-season deal in 2006 (as five years is the Fifa-mandated maximum contract length, the agreement involved a non-binding 'option' to extend), the regulations for older players offer further grounds for concern. Individuals agreeing contracts after the age of 28 can terminate still earlier, at the end of their second season. As Wenger points out, the rule is unlikely to survive a legal challenge by a younger player seeking a second-season escape.
'In the past, you signed and you were there for life,' he says. 'Then you have seen Bosman coming in, then Webster. It looks like the balance goes always towards the player. And if you go to appeal, there is no protection any more. At the moment, after 28 you need only two years. I see the next thing coming is people saying, "Why is it 28 and not 27? That's age discrimination. Why do we have to wait two years after 28 and three years before?"
'If it goes down to two as well, you go from one extreme to the other. It could mean the disappearance of transfer fees.'
Arsenal are already suffering. This season past, Mathieu Flamini ran down his contract before accepting the richest deal offered to join AC Milan. Alexander Hleb's future is unsure after he threatened to terminate without just cause. And Emmanuel Adebayor's future will be determined by the club's response to Milan's offer to multiply his salary. On Friday Adebayor said: 'I am footballer, I have a three-year contract at Arsenal but as you know, a lot of clubs are interested in me. Arsène Wenger is like a father to me... but if he sells me for €50m, everyone is getting the benefits.'
If that should amuse the Italian, Spanish and French clubs who have suffered as Arsenal have diligently exploited the other end of transfer regulations to relocate their academy elite to north London, there is further encouragement for them in Wenger's analysis of the Premier League's status in the world game. An English club is yet to employ a World Footballer of the Year, never mind one in his prime. Just as Ronaldinho appears a probable capture, this year's champion-in-waiting is plotting his departure.
'You would want Ronaldo to stay and Kaká to come to England,' Wenger says. 'It looks for me that the financial dominance of England in the last three or four years has been rebalanced. Italy was knocked down and has recovered. Spain has moved up. Financially it will be more difficult to dominate as we have done in the last few years. Football dominance is linked with economic dominance. You have to give more money to the player who has played in Italy or he doesn't move.
'I don't want Ronaldo to leave, not at all. I'm for stability.'
Unfortunately, in the era of the €100m footballer, what clubs say no longer necessarily goes.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/football/2008/jun/29/arsenal
Read other external articles:
Euro 2008: Should we support Spain?
Deco and Marquez represented by superagent
Silva versus Arshavin (Times scouting report)




