Wednesday, February 29, 2012

Denilson leaves Arsenal for season-long loan at Sao Paulo

Denilson leaves Arsenal for season-long loan at Sao Paulo

15:36 BST, Wed 20 Jul 2011
Denilson leaves Arsenal for season-long loan at Sao Paulo

LONDON, July 20 (Reuters) - Arsenal's Brazilian midfielder Denilson has re-joined his former club Sao Paulo on a season-long loan, the Premier League side said on Wednesday.

UK Football

Manager Arsene Wenger said at the weekend that the 23-year-old would be returning to Brazil for the 2011-12 season, and the club confirmed his destination on their website (www.arsenal.com).

Denilson, who made his first-team debut for Arsenal in October 2006 in a League Cup match against West Bromwich Albion, made 153 appearances for the London side and scored 10 goals.

After establishing himself as a regular in the 2008-09 season, he struggled for a regular start last season.

Denilson, who is from Sao Paulo, played 13 times for the Brazilian club in 2005-06 before his move to London in a 3.4 million pounds ($5.49 million) transfer.

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Louis Saha: ?Footballers prefer prostitutes?

Tottenham star Louis Saha has claimed that many young footballers use hookers in a bid to stay out of the newspapers. The former Manchester United star is currently doing the media rounds to promote his autobiography. But he claims that many players are so concerned about negative publicity from kiss-and-tell stories that they call upon [...]


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Arsenal's Arteta has no regrets leaving Barcelona

Arsenal midfielder Mikel Arteta has no regrets quitting Barcelona as a young player.

Arteta left Barca for PSG before moving to the UK and Rangers

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George's Premiership Predictions January 21

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Tuesday, February 28, 2012

Man City?s Silva absolutely confident that Torres will find form with Chelsea

Manchester City ace David Silva is convinced that Fernando Torres will eventually find his goalscoring form with Chelsea.

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Aston Villa at Wigan: Three away points the banker bet of the day

Wigan are bottom of the table for many reasons and one of those is why I don't particularly like the idea of Martinez as manager of Aston Villa and also why we will get three points today.

Wigan is the win out of four for Alex McLeish and it is playing teams like Wigan that keep him in a job and it is why if you were having a bet today you can stick it on Aston Villa.

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George's Premiership Predictions December 17 2011

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Sports News: Parker given England accolade

Tottenham midfielder Scott Parker has been voted Vauxhall England Player of the Year.

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Monday, February 27, 2012

2014: Salmond, Levein, Fletcher and Scotland's destiny

1000 days. Or thereabouts.

After a rather dull game of Westminster-Holyrood constitutional ping pong, Alex Salmond has named his (rough) date.

The destiny of a nation, as dictated by the constitutional will of the Scottish people, will be decided in the autumn of 2014.

What a year to pick. The 700th anniversary of Bannockburn, the year of Glasgow's Commonwealth Games, the year of Scotland's Ryder Cup, the second running of the Homecoming celebration.

The perfect stage for a yes vote on independence.

Maybe. As Severin Carrell has pointed out on The Guardian website, Bannockburn might not be a massive crowd pleaser.

The Commonwealth Games is rather second rate these days and carries the risk, as a trip back to the 1986 hosting of the event in Edinburgh would show, of throwing up costly organisational chaos.

The Ryder Cup is a fine tournament but it could be that this is golfing jamboree in the home of golf that will have very little Scottish involvement where it really matters.

And I'm still not quite sure what the last Homecoming event was all about.

No, these aren't guaranteeing ways of securing the feelgood factor that will send us on our way to nationhood.

It needs something else, something bigger.

It needs football.

Scotland at the 2014 World Cup in Rio: carnival time from Pilton to S�o Paulo.

But Alex Salmond needs Craig Levein to get him there.

And Craig Levein might well need Steven Fletcher to get him there.

Time for the First Minister to stop goading Gideon, dissing Dave and to get on with the job of marriage counsellor to the stubborn national manager and his recalcitrant striker.

What better backdrop could Salmond have than a resurgent Scotland, - led by a benevolent Levein, inspired by the prodigal Fletcher and celebrating a spirit of inclusion with the English-born Jordan Rhodes - cutting a dash in Rio?

Start banging heids together Eck.

And, if you really want to win the vote, you might look at scheduling the referendum some time between the days of blind optimism engendered by our second group game and the inevitably humbling failure of our third group game.

More seriously, if you've got any views at all on how football could be affected by the independence debate I'd be delighted to hear them

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Water Sports At AFCON

Including both diving and synchronized swimming.
His name is Narcisse Ekanga, and there is a pool of water near him – or all around him, rather. There’s also a rounding of the football gods cursing him with some really bad karma for the rest of AFCON.
There’s actually a very real chance he was hurt on the [...]

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Man Utd legend Keane takes fresh aim at players after Ajax defeat

Manchester United legend Roy Keane has taken fresh aim at their performances in Europe.

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Daniel Sturridge: Should Manchester United Target the "Unhappy" Chelsea Striker?

In the past couple of weeks, there have been murmurs in the British press that Chelsea striker Daniel Sturridge is unhappy at the club. Rumours have suggested that the English star has become disillusioned with the state of the club both on and off of the pitch, and for this reason would like to move on in the near future.

Speaking to British tabloid The Sun, a close friend of Sturridge's said:

Daniel will be distraught if Chelsea finish outside the top four—he's desperate to prove himself at the highest level and that means he wants Champions League football, not Europa League.

Alongside the chance that Chelsea might not finish in the top four, Sturridge is also concerned by the fact that he is constantly played out of position. Andre Villas-Boas has stuck by Fernando Torres at centre-forward this season, pushing Sturridge out to the right wing—could Sturridge have had a more prolific season if AVB had trusted him in the centre of attack?

Despite being played out of position, Sturridge has notched 10 goals in the EPL this season—more than double teammate Torres' four.

Reports this week have suggested that Chelsea could be considering a straight swap with London rivals Arsenal for Theo Walcott, but should Man United dive in with an offer? I personally think that the England striker could be the missing link that United are looking for.

Sturridge and current United star Danny Welbeck (or "The Two Dannys," as they've been dubbed) are considered England's next big striker partnership. The two have spent years together coming through England's youth ranks and would no doubt relish the opportunity to play alongside each other for both club and country.Prior to the Under-21 European Championships, Welbeck said the following:

It's good to play alongside Daniel [Sturridge]. You get to know each other and get to develop an understanding with each other and hopefully we can take that with us into the championships. We know where the other is going to be when we play in the front three together, whether we start in the middle or out wide.

I think that signing Sturridge could pave the way to a Yorke and Cole-esque partnership in terms of two players who understand each other so well. On top of this, United already have Javier Hernandez, who is a natural successor to United legend Ole Gunnar Solskjaer in terms of the impact that he can make from the bench and his natural role as a poacher.

This leaves Wayne Rooney with the Sheringham role—which admittedly isn't a great fit, but eventually this would be filled by Will Keane, who has often been likened to the ex-United hitman.

That leaves you with a United strike force with a flavour of '99—four or five really good (and interchangeable) strikers who can keep the goals flowing.

OK, so that may be put down as a madcap idea, but there is no doubting Sturridge's talents, and with Michael Owen and Dimitar Berbatov seemingly at the end of their respective times with United, Sturridge could be the perfect fresh blood to bring into the squad.

Many people have pointed out that Welbeck and Sturridge are very alike, both in terms of how they play their football and personality-wise as well. One big difference is their preferred foot—Sturridge plays primarily on his left while Welbeck favours the right.

Physically they are very similar players—they are both strong and imposing players, but at the same time they are quick on their feet and have great technique. Equally, they have the same weaknesses. Both are somewhat cocky players, which can lead to wasted opportunities when the pass is available. However, the other side of the coin is that they will take a lot more of their chances than the average player, which could potentially lead to more goals.So how could this be employed tactically? Rooney and Welbeck are a match made in heaven right now and Sturridge wouldn't be happy warming the bench. A 4-4-2 diamond formation would be suitable, using Welbeck and Sturridge up top with Rooney just behind them working as an advanced playmaker, and have Chicarito and Keane on the bench as the impact substitutes.

With all three of Rooney, Sturridge and Welbeck in the England setup, the chemistry could be phenomenal.

Alternatively, United could play with three up front, with Rooney on the left, Welbeck in the middle and Sturridge on the right-hand side—a position which he has proved he can play, despite preferring to play at centre-forward.

Of course, the stumbling block could be his price tag. However, with his contract expiring next summer, he could be available for a very reasonable price. His future could hinge on whether Andre Villas-Boas remains at Chelsea past May.

Would you like to see Sturridge plying his trade at Old Trafford? Or do you think the idea is ridiculous? Make sure you get your views heard in the comments section.

Read more Manchester United news on BleacherReport.com

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Sunday, February 26, 2012

Football League weekender | James Dart

The best action and bets from the latest round of matches, plus our pick from the Football League blogosphere

Key matches

? Birmingham City v Southampton looks the Championship's stand-out fixture this weekend, even with West Ham entertaining Millwall at Upton Park. Blues are unbeaten in seven, have won their last four and surged into fourth; as we predicted earlier in the season, their games in hand post-European run have seen them stealthily surge up the table. Nikola Zigic's four goals at Leeds did for Simon Grayson in midweek, taking their scoring to 15 in just four outings and just to further boost manager Chris Hughton's options, Marlon King is available again after injury. Saints remain second despite winning two of their last nine, and their new signing Billy Sharp is set to make his debut at St Andrew's, while the Japan striker Tadanari Lee has also arrived at the club. "We've got good options now," said Nigel Adkins. "From here on in I like to think we're going to be very, very strong."

? After informing a number of players that they had been dropped by a late-night text message, Preston's new manager Graham Westley continues to make serious waves within Deepdale: Clarke Carlisle's season-long loan was terminated, skipper Paul Coutts was stripped of the captaincy and told to shape up or be shipped out, and seven new players were brought in before the transfer window shut. "People are starting to understand that there is one way and it is the winning way at Preston North End," said Westley this week. "The quicker people get on board the quicker we can get down to business." Next up are Brentford at home, themselves still within striking distance of the play-offs, but riding a run of one win in eight, which was a 5-2 beating of Wycombe last weekend.

? If results go their way, Swindon could find themselves top of League Two come Saturday evening. A stunning run of 11 wins from 15 games has propelled Paolo Di Canio's team through the play-off positions and in to an automatic promotion spot, culminating with a 4-1 thrashing of fellow title challengers Southend in midweek. "We know that every direct battle with a promotion rival will be a Champions League final," said Di Canio afterwards. "The first one we had was the best performance and win we had this season, so that shows we do not feel the pressure in any way." Di Canio will have to make to without defender Aden Flint, who is set to miss the rest of the season with a groin problem, starting with Saturday's visit of Burton Albion. The Brewers are still missing absent forwards Billy Kee and Justin Richards, but boss Paul Peschisolido is staying upbeat. "We're going there with one thing in mind ? and that's to give it a go and try to show we've turned the corner," he said.

Players to watch

Ravel Morrison: far and away the single most fascinating deal on deadline day, in any league, and managing to overshadow West Ham's other acquisitions, Nicky Maynard and Ricardo Vaz T�. Much has been written about the 18-year-old; how he delivers the riposte could well shape his career.

Will Hoskins: a forward with bags of talent for the third tier, who has been loaned to Sheffield United following Sam Vokes's arrival at Brighton.

Mark Wilson: the former Manchester United midfielder, who left Old Trafford for Middlesbrough for �1.5m in 2001 and was most recently at Doncaster Rovers, has joined Oxford United until the end of the season.

Goal(s) of the week

Michael Duberry's unconventional hat-trick (two own goals and a last-ditch equaliser in Oxford United's 2-2 draw with Hereford.

Quote of the week

"Some years ago a window cleaner was touting for business down our road and knocked at our door when I was out. Paul later told me the quote had seemed a bit expensive ? �500. I couldn't believe anyone would charge so much so I asked him to tell me more and it turns out the guy said 'five' and Paul, assuming no one would clean windows for �5, had thought he meant �500. He hasn't a clue about money" ? Karren Brady reveals a key fact to Burton Albion fans about her husband and their manager.

Games off (at the time of writing)

League One

Bournemouth v Exeter

League Two

Gillingham v Hereford

Morecambe v Dagenham & Redbridge

Rotherham v Torquay

Best bets

? Huddersfield to beat MK Dons at 11-10. It's rare to find Lee Clark's team longer than odds-against at home this season, and despite throwing in too many draws, they have the quality ? and retention of Jordan Rhodes ? at their disposal to see off visitors with one win in five.

? Stevenage to beat Notts County at 7-4: a pitch inspection is due at Meadow Lane, where Stevenage look a value shot on the road to maintain their mightily impressive League One campaign. Notts County have won just two in 15, while no team has conceded fewer on the road than this weekend's visitors: 11 in 14 games.

We'll monitor the "best bets" progress through the season, with a set stake of �10 per bet. Current profit: �5.30. Again, there's no tipping contest this season, but that doesn't stop you posting your best bet suggestions below the line. And for those who would like to take part, we have set up a private Championship Fantasy League, the pin for which is: 12647. Phil Avery is still in front with Numbers Game.

What you may have missed from the blogosphere

? Seat Pitch on the need for unity at Nottingham Forest:

We can accuse and castigate and grind this club into the dirt with bitterness or we can seek to come alongside the club, open a dialogue and plot a way forward. How we do that is the first point of debate. Maybe we need a mass sign-up to the Supporters' Club or maybe it is to follow fans at other clubs and create a Supporters' Trust. Whatever the answer, we need an organised and viable means to play our part. Otherwise we risk abusing this club into oblivion.

? You can read much more from our Football League blogosphere, which should now have been updated to include more of your recently suggested blogs.

Still want more?

Jamie Jackson and snapper Tom Jenkins go behind the scenes at West Ham's academy to run the rule over their talented class of 2012.

And Simon Grayson had his faults at Leeds, admits Rob Bagchi, but fans are right to question the timing of his sacking.


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Korean Transfer Window Well And Truly Open

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Manchester United: Danny Welbeck or Javier Hernandez?

The big debate this season for Manchester United supporters has been whether David de Gea or Anders Lindegaard should be the first-choice goalkeeper, but there is an equally appealing debate at the other end of the pitch.

Danny Welbeck has been a revelation this season, his exceptional form leaving last year's big sensation Javier Hernandez on the bench for much of the campaign. The debate now rages around which of two incredibly gifted young strikers should partner Wayne Rooney up front.

Both players certainly have the credentials to lead the line at a club like United. They both have good, yet similar records, Welbeck with nine goals in 25 appearances and Hernandez with nine goals in 26 appearances. Virtually nothing to separate them in that regard, but their style of play is quite contrasting.

Based on that, which one deserves to be first-choice alongside Rooney?

Welbeck left United last season as a boy and returned from Sunderland in the summer as a man. The development to his physique proved beneficial for success in the physical style of the Premier League. He can now battle with defenders and force himself into a good positions.

It has also aided him in build-up play, holding off defenders to maintain possession and get his teammates involved.

He does everything you want from a center forward. Welbeck is quick with a good touch and just the slightest bit of flair. He works hard to get others involved in the attack, contributing to the build-up play.

 

On top of all that, he does what a striker should do: He score goals.  

Welbeck is an underrated finisher. His goal against Manchester City in the FA Cup was simply spectacular, twisting it and hitting it on the volley into the top corner of the net. Not only was it the finish of a great striker, but it also demonstrated the confidence required of a great striker.

A few weeks later, he showed he also had good positional awareness, scoring the winner late against Arsenal by getting himself into the box, creating space and hammering the ball into the net with his first touch before defenders could respond.

He has an excellent repertoire of goals, from the spectacular to the simple, and obviously the best strikers are the ones who can do it all.

Perhaps Welbeck's greatest attribute, however, is his determination to chase down the opposition. He does not allow the opposing defense a moment's rest, constantly running and harassing players in an attempt to get the ball or make them play a careless pass. He tracks back and does his part to win back possession.

This is something that is lost when Hernandez is in the team. Hernandez is the prime example of a poacher, and a very good one at that. He plays right along the defenders, attempting to break the offside trap with intelligent runs and blistering pace.

Rarely do you see Hernandez track back to defend, nor does he get substantially involved in the build-up play. That is not a slight against him, it simply isn't his job.

His greatest contribution to the team is when he is in the box providing a target for his teammates, and that is surely where the manager wants him to be. Hernandez has an uncanny ability to get into good positions and is an excellent finisher once he gets an opportunity. He gets a lot of easy goals doing that, and any manager would want that player hovering around the goal at all times.

There is no denying his ability to be in the right place and the right time, but he fails to add much else to the team. You want Hernandez in and around the box, and he would be wasted anywhere else. Welbeck, on the other hand, can contribute beyond that.

Another concern is Hernandez being consistently flagged for offside. When he has a poor game and the runs are slightly mistimed, he struggles to contribute.

 

There's no doubting that this tactic does work, and when it does, he's in on goal. His goal against Chelsea at Old Trafford last season in a fantastic example of why it's a useful tactic. However, when it doesn't work, there is rarely a "Plan B."

In the big games, there is simply no overlooking Welbeck in favor of Hernandez. When United are playing against talented sides, all 11 players need to contribute in all areas of the pitch.

A striker like Welbeck, who harasses defenders, tracks back to defend and contributes to the build-up play, has a bigger overall contribution to the team. Hernandez does not offer the same, playing off the shoulder of defenders, trying to sneak in with a run to break the offside trap.

That's not to say Hernandez has no place in the team. Old Gunnar Solskjaer made a career as a "super sub," and Hernandez shows great potential to thrive in such a role. He came on against Chelsea as a substitute and wreaked havoc with his pace and movement, finding himself an incredible amount of space to head home the equalizer.

Welbeck does not seem as suited to come off the bench, while Hernandez does an excellent job at getting in sync with his teammates and finding their rhythm. It doesn't take much for him to come in fresh and find space to beat tiring defenders with his pace.

Hernandez and Welbeck will both get their fair share of starts in the coming seasons. They each offer something different that Sir Alex Ferguson can utilize depending on the opposition. Welbeck has the technical ability to contribute in the build-up and works hard tracking back, while Hernandez can beat defenders with his speed and movement alone.

Both are terrific players that United supporters should be grateful to have, but only one can start alongside Rooney, and especially in the big games, it has to be Welbeck.

Read more Manchester United news on BleacherReport.com

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Paul Pogba / Pogba on way out of Man Utd after being told to train on his own

New doubts over Paul Pogba's future at Manchester United have been raised.

The Daily Star Sunday says his United future looks over after he found himself training on his own

Read more Paul Pogba news

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Saturday, February 25, 2012

Rangers newco: Yes or no?

Will Scottish football die if Rangers are wiped from our footballing landscape?

No. It would be greatly changed. But it would adjust and it would survive.

But it's disingenuous to deride those who claim that the end of Rangers equals the death of the game as weak willed apologists for a failed institution.

The question is framed incorrectly.

Would Scottish football be willing to let Rangers die? To me that's the more instructive query.

Let's imagine that this current period of administration fails. The big tax case is lost. Rangers go into liquidation.

Craig Whyte - if he's still around, doing little to dissuade people of the opinion that this has always been the end game of his dreams - knocks at the SPL door.

"I've founded a newco, Rangers 2012, and I want to play in the SPL again."

There would be but one moral answer to the chinless - but remarkably brass-necked - charlatan. It's short, satisfying and blunt.

What Rangers have been doing with HMRC's money this season is despicable. The outcome of the tax case could condemn their recent history to being recorded as a stretched out theft against the authorities. At the very least they have lived above their means to artificially enhance their chances on the pitch.

Cheating, financial doping. An assault on the integrity of the sport.

The six man SPL board would have no option but to refuse Rangers' newco entry to the league. It would be immoral to decide anything else.

But will they be able to isolate themselves from all other considerations and make a purely moral choice?

Take a look at the TV deal. We know that the new deal signed with Sky and ESPN last November is worth �16 million a season to the SPL.

We also know that deal will be ripped up if there is any shift from the current arrangement where the league split guarantees four Old Firm games a season.

Sky, the senior partner in the deal, show all four of those games. The final Old Firm game of last season was the first Scottish game to reach one million Sky viewers.

I'll suggest the other three games were watched by an average of 700,000 viewers. That's 3.1 million viewers for four games.

Take those four games out of the season's nine million total audience. That's an average of around 105,000 viewers for each game featuring just one of the Old Firm or two non-Old Firm teams.

Would Sky be tempted to pay good money to cram those games into their crowded schedule? I don't think so. That would leave ESPN as the sole bidder for the rights and the SPL hoping they'd want to double the number of Scottish games they show.

That's a bargaining position for the league that would leave the TV deal not just reduced but decimated.

The counter-argument is that the current distribution of TV money is so inequitable that the SPL's "other ten" teams would be able to cope with the financial hit.

Perhaps some, maybe most, would. But the existing deal provides guaranteed income. We know that many of our clubs live a hand-to-mouth existence, with levels of debt and ratios of wages to turnover that are all but unsustainable.

It's not outlandish to assume that the existing TV deal provides the leverage they need to keep trading at a just about manageable level.

It might be relatively low sums involved but this is a league where �35,000 represents a big January signing, where a club will shut a stand for the season to try and save �20,000. The loss of small sums could be fatal.

Neil Doncaster, the SPL's chief executive, has also previously suggested that every single sponsorship deal the league has is dependent on the Old Firm continuing.

So the remaining teams would likely have to accept reduced sponsorship money with renegotiations made harder by the uncertainty over a new TV deal.

That would mean an overhaul of the league's distribution of prize money and parachute payments. Another revenue stream would be considerably damaged.

The counter-argument to this is what I might call the Utopian scenario.

Here we see a newly competitive league attracting more supporters, and offering clubs easier access to European competition.

Would the league be more competitive? The question should be "is playing for second more attractive than playing for third?"

As their chief executive, Peter Lawwell, said this week Celtic's business model is perfectly sustainable without Rangers.

They also have access to match day revenues and a cash spending fan base that dwarfs every other club.

In the immediate shock of adjustment to a Rangers free Scotland, Celtic would be uniquely placed to weather the storm.

That would suggest they'd move further away from the chasing pack, with every other club - already operating cost cutting schemes - further reducing their playing budgets.

That in turn would diminish the quality on show. It would remain to be seen if the lure of watching average teams play it out for second place would be enough to bring supporters back.

Would they come back anyway? There are no guarantees. Most of our clubs have shown how easy it is to lose fans and how hard it is to get them back.

Given the reductions likely in other incomes there would also seem to be little chance of ticket prices falling.

Is it the lack of competition, the price or the product that keeps fans away? Or is it a combination of all three - a combination likely to remain with or without Rangers.

Good luck going to the bank and asking for them to sign off a business plan that has "the fans will probably come back we think. Maybe." as the main revenue stream.

Europe? It's quite a leap to think that our clubs are going to massively improve in, say, the first three seasons without Rangers. The current trend of continental woe would continue, hurting the co-efficient and so making it harder for them to get real financial benefit from European participation. Qualification might be something of a Pyrrhic victory for many.

Scottish football wouldn't die without Rangers, no. But delivering us from the evil of Rangers might not deliver us to the promised land.

That will leave the people running our clubs anxious.

How, for example, do Dunfermline feel?

It might be argued that the way Rangers played fast and loose with the actuality of their wealth has cost Dunfermline league positions - along with increased prize money - and perhaps contributed to their relegation from the SPL.

We're denied the gift of time travel so we can know none of those things for certain. But it's reasonable to assume that the way Rangers imposed unfair practices on an already uneven playing field has hurt every club in some way. That might well have cost Dunfermline dear and contributed to their precarious financial position.

So Dunfermline have basically been punished for Rangers' mismanagement.

They would want to see Rangers pay for that. But what if punishing Rangers means saying no to the Rangers newco and that is a course of action that would condemn Dunfermline - this is hypothetical - to administration because of the impact it would have on prize money or parachute payments?

In that scenario Dunfermline are being punished twice for someone else's crimes.

Or imagine you are a club director. A goal from a Rangers player that they'd signed on big money thanks to their artificial financial construct cost your club a place in a Scottish Cup final.

Denied the money from reaching the final - maybe even winning the trophy - your club struggled at the end of that season. You reached in to your own pocket and paid part of the wage bill and gave a soft loan to cover a tax payment.

You'd feel physically sick at Craig Whyte's non-payment of �9 million in taxes.

But you'd also see that your club has moved on and developed a sustainable model based on remaining in the SPL and enjoying your small slice of TV money.

Now here are Rangers, a club dealing with finances that your club wouldn't match in a decade, asking for forgiveness.

You'd think "hell mend them." Until you thought about that TV deal and realised that without it your club would return to financial disarray.

There is no moral reasoning I can imagine that would persuade me that "new Rangers" are in any way deserving of a place in the SPL.

It would be the final gargantuan cheat in a litany of wrongdoing that should shame every director, accountant and discredited owner of that club.

But how moral can you afford to be if saying no to "new Rangers" would mean the end of your club?

I suppose there is an argument that this could be the seismic event we need to put the strugglers and stragglers of the Scottish game out of business.

Yet it's hard to see how financial chicanery at Ibrox should threaten the existence of other clubs. That's not survival of the fittest, that's murder at the hands of the most corrupt.

For the integrity of the league, saying "no" is a decision that would seem to be a moral absolute.

But if that's weighed against having to tell your own fans that what little money there is has gone, telling your own employees that they are out of job, then it becomes a little less clear, a little less certain.

I hope that the SPL are doing everything in their power to insulate other clubs from the immediate impact of Rangers' administration and that the business implications of life without Rangers are being thoroughly explored.

But I fear Rangers cheating has left our clubs with a huge, difficult, complex decision to make. The right decision could be the wrong decision for other clubs. The wrong decision, even if it saves their own club, will outrage supporters across the country.

Right, wrong, moral, immoral. I don't envy them their choice.

Update: After a chat on Twitter I think I should probably add that this exploration of the newco option depends on "new Rangers" being legally validated. Phoenixism, the term apparently used in such situations, is not illegal and not all newcos are "rogue companies" but it might not entirely free Rangers from the attentions of the taxman.

If there is dubiety about the legality of the new company the decision would surely be taken out of the SPL's hands.

Would there be an option for the SPL to set out strict conditions for re-entry? Conditions that might include no current board members or any members of the old board being involved in the "newco?"

Update two: Couple of related articles in today's Herald which I think confirm some of the concerns I've taken a look at. Former St Johnstone chairman Geoff Brown has his say and Richard Wilson speaks to Stephen Morrow, the head of Sports Studies at Stirling University.

> There are other opinions, cheerier than mine:

We Know SFA

Wings over Scotland

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Alex / McLeish feeling the heat at Villa

Alex McLeish said vocal opposition from Aston Villa's supporters is making his job difficult following a 0-0 draw with Wigan Athletic.

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Javier Hernandez / Hernandez urges United to focus

Javier Hernandez has stressed the importance of Manchester United gaining maximum points in their remaining English Premier League matches.

Read more Javier Hernandez news

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Frugality, Whyte knights and January gambles

A week away from the blog.

I'd like to explain my absence with exciting tales of derring do. But I can't. The most excitement I got was watching Hibs beat Kilmarnock in the Scottish Cup, nailbiting to the end.

No, I've been away largely because I couldn't be arsed for the last week. One of the many dividing lines between the humdrum blogger and the paid chronicler of our beautiful game is that my can't-be-arsedness means very little to anyone, can't-be-arsedness on their part means children go unfed.

What great events did I miss?

Well, speaking of paid chroniclers, last week was the week that the Daily Record - oft referred to as the Daily Ranger in the more unforgiving corners of our footballing society, a newspaper once literally printed on blue paper - suggested that, whatever else he may be, Rangers owner Craig Whyte is not, after all, a white knight.

Rangers, said the Record, are screwed. One way or t'other, to differing degrees dependent on a variable here or there, but screwed nonetheless.

"Not so," responded Craig Whyte.

This, largely, is all Craig Whyte does. Deny things. Sometimes he also issues legal threats. But largely he denies and denies and denies. He's either incredibly wronged or he's the boy who cried wolf until he was hoarse.

One thing he's not, right now, is the owner of a football club with any momentum. Behind in the league, out of the cup - all the cups - and shorn of their star striker.

Rangers lost the the transfer window just as surely as they lost to Dundee United in that meek Scottish Cup capitulation on Sunday.

Gone is Nikica Jelavi?, in is the initially phonetically amusing and initially underwhelming Mervan Celik.

A January devoted to frugality? Perhaps. But it's hard to see how this window's business has done anything but further deflate the Ibrox championship challenge.

And still, perhaps, even bigger battles lie ahead.

Rangers January's travails allowed Celtic to complete a quiet month looking like the biggest winners. Ahead in the SPL and getting past opponents of all shapes and sizes in the three domestic competitions, Celtic brought in Pawel Brozek, Rabiu Ibrahim and Michael Lustig.

What impact the three recruits will have remains to be seen. In a strange January, however, Celtic kept hold of their best players. That may well be enough in what has become a treble chasing season.

Holding on to your best players; Hearts managed that as well, despite talk of a financially motivated fire sale.

That looked to have set them up for a real tilt at third place. Best-of-the-rest might still be a realistic possibility but less than a week into February and Hearts have apparently all but dispensed with the services of 'keeper Mari�n Kello after a move to Austria Wien fell through.

And then the taxman - who has become as ubiquitous as the SFA compliance officer this SPL season - came calling once again with a bill to be settled and a court date to hammer home the point.

It looks like whatever Hearts achieve this season - and they could still achieve a lot - it will be done against an economically unsettled backdrop. Paulo Sergio must surely be getting used to having to do things the hard way.

Doing things the hard way seems to be a capital trend right now. A beleaguered Hibs team has once again been subjected to a January revolution.

Colin Calderwood's miracle cure lasted for about six games last season. That was enough to win him a manager of the month award and save Easter Road from hosting First Division football.

Then things settled down and the incredulous faithful realised that Calderwood had built something even worse than what had gone before.

The hope is that Pat Fenlon's reshaping will have more sticking power, although the short term goal remains the same - to finish the season in 11th place or better.

There was relief but also a certain belief as Hibs got past Kilmarnock on Saturday. But they face Aberdeen next weekend joint bottom of the table. The proof of whether Hibs have gathered another bunch of puddings lies in the weeks and games ahead.

Elsewhere prudence prevailed. Aberdeen brought in five players with Russell Anderson, Stephen Hughes and Gavin Rae addressing any problems Craig Brown felt he had with experience in the squad. And I'm intrigued to see how Danny Uchechi - a 22 year who stupendously reverses any Pittodrie strategy of making signings with senior experience in mind - fares. Scouting reports from elsewhere suggest his pedigree falls somewhere below middling.

St Mirren bought - the very act of "buying" seems something of a throwback these days, especially when the fee is �35,000 - Dougie Imrie and were boosted by Jim Goodwin deciding to stay put, a decision which would suggest that belief remains in the Danny Lennon Project.

The benefit of holding on should also be felt at St Johnstone where Francisco Sandaza remains until the end of the season, a rumoured victim of the general cack-handedness of Rangers' current recruitment policy.

Early reports suggest Motherwell have unearthed something a wee bit special in Henrik Ojamaa and Dean Shiels has made a video montage with a Cat Stevens soundtrack pretty much compulsory in the build up to the league cup final by staying on at Kilmarnock.

Dundee United brought in only Richie Ryan and Milo? La?n� but the crucial business at Tannadice was keeping a tight rein on Johnny Russell as vultures swooped.

Inverness were restricted to a couple of loan deals and the free transfer of Claude Gnakpa - an "exciting asset" according to Terry Butcher, whose word I'll need to trust for now.

Dunfermline, the church mice of the SPL whose fiscal travails would have inspired Charles Dickens, brought in Kyle Hutton on loan from Rangers and raided the same discount store to get Jordan McMillan on a free.

A 1-1 draw with Kilmarnock last night - their first home point since November - brought Dunfermline level with Hibs having played a game more.

Where Pat Fenlon has chosen scalpel wielding and reconstructive surgery, Jim McIntyre has been left to largely make do and mend.

If off-field events could still impact on the top of the league, at the bottom it looks like being a battle of wits between those two managers.

One was given resource enough to take a January gamble. How that works out will decide this relegation battle.

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Friday, February 24, 2012

PSG coach Makelele saddened by Chelsea situation

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Neil Warnock's right: anything could happen with him in charge at Leeds | James Riach

What Leeds United need is for everyone to pull together. Is Neil Warnock the right man to make that happen?

Neil Warnock's reign at Leeds United had only lasted a matter of hours before fireworks sparked. Unsavoury scenes at the final whistle following the 3-2 victory over Doncaster Rovers on Saturday may not have involved the 63-year-old, but a melee in the tunnel could set a precedent for another tenure packed with incident and contention.

Police at Elland Road rushed to diffuse a ruckus which, perhaps unsurprisingly, involved El Hadji Diouf as a key instigator. Diouf, whom Warnock has previously described as a "sewer rat", exchanged words with Ross McCormack and Alex Bruce after a Leeds winner nine minutes into added time that leaves the West Yorkshire club three points off the Championship play-offs.

Warnock may not have taken charge of the side for the Doncaster game, but he spoke to the players in the dressing room at half-time and his encouraging words had a "big impact" on the second-half comeback, according to the caretaker manager, Neil Redfearn.

He has never been one to shy away from the spotlight or acquiesce in the face of adversity, and given the owner Ken Bates's penchant for forthright opinions, confrontation further down the line may be unavoidable. With such similarly vociferous personalities one could argue the 18-month contract agreed after six hours of negotiating in Monte Carlo is a match made in heaven. A contrary view, however, points to a Faustian pact signed in darkest Hades. The two brash characters who could have worked together at Chelsea, had Warnock not turned down a move to west London in 1991, may have to agree to a non-aggression truce to put the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact of 1939 to shame.

How long the partnership remains on an even keel is anyone's guess but at a club where the majority of supporters feel disillusioned with the lack of investment in the playing squad, there may be few better people tasked with seeing Leeds return to the Premier League after an eight-year absence than a man who has three promotions to the top-flight on his managerial CV.

Warnock's relationship with Leeds over the years has been fractious to say the least. Commonly referred to as "Colin" by supporters, due to a rather unfortunate anagram of his name, the nadir came in April 2006 when, as Sheffield United's manager, he was forcefully ejected from the Elland Road dugout by a police officer following a heated confrontation with his opposite number Kevin Blackwell ? formerly his assistant at Bramall Lane.

There are a myriad of anecdotes that reflect Warnock's outspoken personality. He is a man who once called the former referee David Elleray "that bald-headed bloke", Stan Ternent a "deranged lunatic" and Jos� Mourinho a "good-looking swine". If Ken Bates's columns did not already make Leeds's matchday programme interesting reading, the new manager's certainly will do now.

Supporters will warm to Warnock if the results come, but apart from being able to dip into the loan market between now and the end of the season, something the former coach Simon Grayson did a remarkable 33 times over 37 months, he will have to work with the players at his disposal.

Much criticism was aimed at Bates following the decision to sack Grayson the day after the January transfer window closed ? it was no coincidence, argued many, that the chairman would not have to discuss available funds when persuading a new man to take the job.

Opposition to Bates has reached a new level in recent weeks. Selling Jonny Howson to Norwich City, the club captain and local lad, was seen by many as the final straw. His departure came as a result of a breakdown in negotiations over a new contract ? a situation that feels like Groundhog Day for fans who have seen Jermaine Beckford, Bradley Johnson and Neil Kilkenny all depart for nothing in the past two years.

The Leeds United Supporters Trust's "campaign for change" march before last weekend's defeat to Brighton & Hove Albion showed the level of discontent. Several hundred protesters aired their ire at the club's hierarchy with banners such as "Premier League, not Premier Inn" on display as a direct response against plans to build a hotel and casino at Elland Road.

Ever the diplomat, Bates did not ignore the dissenters, far from it. He told Yorkshire Radio: "Where do you think the money comes from? Do you think it grows on trees? So those people prancing up and down, waving their banners, they've got no positive solution to what they perceive as a problem. In fact, all they do is add to it by deterring potential investors."

It is a combustible mix of mistrust and malcontent that shows no sign of abating. Add Warnock into this explosive situation and you have yourself a ticking time bomb. His no-nonsense approach may be exactly what Leeds require to pick up spirits, but what they really need is everyone pulling in the same direction.

On his hopes for the remainder of the campaign, Warnock said: "I think anything could happen." Few would disagree.


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