Report names youngster set to make ‘significant impact’ at Man Utd

Manchester United expect James Garner to be the next youngster off the production line to make a positive contribution to Ole Gunnar Solskjaer’s squad, according to reports.

The Red Devils were beaten 1-0 at struggling Newcastle on Sunday and their only victory in their last five outings in all competitions was a penalty shoot-out success over League One side Rochdale in the Carabao Cup.

United have claimed just nine points from their opening eight games in the Premier League and are 12th in the table, 15 points behind leaders Liverpool.

However, one bright spark to come out of the season so far is the integration of youth into Solskjaer’s squad, including the likes of Mason Greenwood, Scott McTominay, Axel Tuanzebe, Tahith Chong and Angel Gomes.

And The Times claims that ‘there is an expectation’ that Garner, who made his United debut against Crystal Palace in February, ‘will be the next one to step up and make a significant impact’.

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The report adds that Brandon Williams, who was on the bench against Newcastle, is another one to watch as he is ‘highly regarded as a full back with the character to succeed.’

How the PL top six will look at the end of the season

You know what to do – keep those mails coming to [email protected]

 

What will actually happen to top six by season end
Lots of gnashing of teeth out there – kneejerking / spaffing / toys being thrown out of prams etc .. but lets look at the facts ;

Liverpool – general concensus is they are sorted and will ( whatever blips may occur) finally hit their holy grail – will win Premiership

Man City – will end their cycle, Pep sounds like he’s ready for next job, will march onwards but they need to replace some old’uns – will win champions league as a last Pep hurrah

Man Utd – aren’t as bad as is being made out (some truth in decisions not going their way, they should have at least another 4 points and things wouldn’t look AS bad) – will turn a corner somehow (new manager / Pogba trying / Ibra back) – top 6

Chelsea – things falling into place but will lose confidence when things turn against them and Europe kicks in hard – third and FA cup

Spurs – are in spiral – there is definitely something wrong internally – Poch will get what he wants ( 6 out – 4 in ) in Jan and then it will be a question of who wants to stay for 20/21 – if they have another summer of 2019 it could be a long way back ( think Arsenal post their Champions League Final ) – top 6

Arsenal – Desperately need to introduce / welcome back Tiernay/Bellerin/Holding/Lacazette and hope one of the young midfielders comes through – Emery is the luckiest manager in league – Arsenal couldn’t beat worst Spurs and Man Utd teams (of the last 10 years ?) should have lost to Watford/Villa/Bournemouth, scraped past a (then) rancid Newcastle and were lucky against Burnley – oh and were wiped off the pitch by Liverpool – Emery still there – out of top 6

However any of man u / spurs / arsenal will be replaced by  Leicester and/or Wolves  if changes don’t occur …… it will be tough watching but lets not get over excited …. The die is cast and any of the rest are even worse ( although some Palace fans may be getting excited – the sane ones know they are only a week away from a run of 10 defeats/draws) .
Gary – call me paddy power – Gooner

 

Biggest club nonsense…
Dear oh dear oh dear…

‘Man United always bigger than Liverpool’ – what are we Paul Murphy, 11?

Then, ‘…even when our best player wants to bugger off to Spain we still get more column inches than you.’

Jesus wept. Firstly, are you talking about Pogba? Best player? Pretty low bar, that. You mean the guy you let go then bought back for a billion quid. The same Pogba who is more bothered about dying his hair than he is playing football.

Christ, I am glad he is not our ‘best player’.

Secondly, do you really judge how many ‘column inches’ you get as an indicator of how ‘big’ you are? You can keep your column inches fella, because let’s face it, you are getting your column inches because your club is a shambles from top to bottom.

I’ll take last season’s Champions League if it’s all the same, I think that clearly says a lot without filling the tabloids.

The press thrive on failure, you not worked that out yet? Hence Utd are currently, a journo’s dream.

#bantz
(A different) Paul, London

 

Clearly Anon touched a nerve there eh Paul Murphy? For those of us that have lived through the Fergie years not supporting Man United, listening to all the self-glorying, self-entitled guff (mainly from fans than the team to be fair), I’m not sure I have ever read anything that better summarised how it now feels better than Anon’s mail. How stupid do those Paris celebrations now look? Nail. On. Head. Hit.

United may well be “box office” at the moment as he says but I think Mr Murphy is missing the point. The queue to get the tickets at the box office has a big sign saying Horror Show above it. United are box office in the same way that videos of plane crashes on YouTube are.

It’s a bigger story than all others because we are witnessing the demise of a piece of history. That fact is truly box office and maybe will even be turned into a movie one day. Working titles include: “The New Leeds United”; “How to Blow £800m and still be worse than Rochdale” and “Lord Of The Rings 4 – Gollum Runs A Football Club”.

Anon could have gone further and mentioned some other comedy gold. Rio’s “we’re back” looks pretty funny now. And that Ole’s At The Wheel thing. Jesus. What Paul really needs to do is relax, suck it up and accept that it’s just United’s turn to be tripe. Literally everyone else has been there, it just took United a while to catch up. Fans like Paul are doing such a good job of trying to deny it and now even measuring their success in “column inches” just adds to the hilarity. Please stop it now, I can’t get on with my work with all the laughter.
Paul

 

As a Liverpool supporter, I for one think that Paul Murphy is probably right that Manchester United on the back of historic success in the Premier League era is the ‘bigger’ club at this point.  It was a status built by an astute manager and a board that was able to capitalize on the commercial possibility of the Premier League.

Well the manager has left and the board that so ably guided the club is a distant memory, and Paul comes across a bit like Nero, fiddling while Rome burned.

So I whole heartedly support Paul’s assessment.  We’re not as big a club, we don’t have the same commercial muscle.  I’m fine with that.  What we do have is an astute manager and a board that has provided all the tools for the club to succeed going forward.

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Paul can cling to the past, make excuses for the present.  It sounds very much like the same song a lot of Liverpool supporters sang as United passed us.   If we have more supporters like Paul, then United will continue to warble along, the Glazers content to flex their commercial muscle and reap the reward of the previous generation’s success.

So yes, United can continue to be the bigger club…I’ll take trophy challenges over Spanish headlines every day of the week.
Mark LFC (Seriously, can you not see the irony of United fans boasting of past success during the current mediocrity)?

 

Paul Murphy, Manchester.  The bitterest of all Man U fans (how ironic), has got his knickers in a twist about a rival fan’s wind up email.

Perhaps he’s smarting about his summer prediction?

I’m preparing for the ridicule and scoffing as I type this but I’m putting it on the line that United will mount a title challenge this season, every man and his dog has written us off telling us City and Liverpool are head and shoulders above the rest, well I say b*llocks to that we will surprise quite a few people next season mark my words.

Y’know, I think that the surprise you’ve mentioned might just have gone the other way.

I’m also loving the fact that you seem to have reverted to the Manchester United of yesteryear, before the anomaly of the Ferguson years.  You know, all brash and loudmouthed that you were the biggest club in the universe, paying over the odds for players and clinging to a mythical ‘United Way’ whilst Liverpool got on with the business of building a dynasty.  Hopefully history is repeating itself in that final regard as well.

You keep clinging to your column inches mate, we’re more excited about winning football matches and, hopefully, more trophies.
James Outram, Wirral

 

Calm down…
I’ve refrained, until now, from adding to the opinions voiced about my beloved Man Utd but, now that the knees have jerked and the hyperbole has somewhat subsided, I’ll stir it all up again.

I’ve read a number of articles in the last week, titled ‘The 5 things Mourinho got right about Man Utd’ and, in a game of one-upmanship, ‘The 7 things Mourinho was right about …’, you get the idea. I’ve also seen United ‘fans’ stating ‘at least Mourinho won something’, displaying a rose-tinted memory of epic proportions. Mourinho was toxic, the football was dire, the players used as an excuse for why Mourinho didn’t win more and the state he left the club and, more importantly, the players in is still hanging around the club like a fart in a lift.

Look at what Ole inherited and is still working to resolve, disinterested and disillusioned players, many of whom simply aren’t good enough or motivated enough to push for a top four/six/[insert made up target here], let alone play flowing football. Add in the Pogba issue, an egotistical player who has just seen the club sack the manager that he fell out with, further inflating the already ridiculous ego, then look at the players for a leader, a player to inspire those around him, a natural Captain. They simply aren’t there. Ole has got rid of some of the players who didn’t want to contribute (Sanchez, Lukaku), got rid of some of the players who weren’t good enough (Smalling, Fellaini) and brought in three players who are playing some good football, despite injuries and squad limitations.

Looking at the current team, without injuries, the first team is easily good enough for the top half of the table but that’s as good as it is likely to get this season. De Gea, Wan Bissaka, McGuire, Lindelof, Shaw, Martial, Pogba, Matic, Mata/Lingard, James and Rashford is a team that would slowly improve under Ole, I’m sure of that. Unfortunately, six of those are injured and the lightweight squad is not good enough. The club has to buy big in January, despite the apparent ‘lack of value’, as long as the right players can be brought in, bare minimum is a creative midfielder (two if Pogba goes, he really needs to be got rid of) and two strikers.

Sacking Ole now would be a waste of time, he’s had one transfer window and the fact that the club has not broken the bank for mercenaries makes me think we are finally doing some sensible business, a Director of Football would go some way to help Ole but I believe we will be challenging again within two years, for the top six at least, which is realistically where we find ourselves. Getting rid of Ewar Woowar (‘d’s removed for comic effect) would be a good move as well, or at least getting him well away from the football side of the club.

Cheers,
Paul, Man Utd

 

A little (lotta) love for Coleen Rooney
Appreciate I’m normally one of the first to say the ‘WAGs’ drama/news sections of newspapers should be shunned/ignored so partners of players aren’t randomly objectified and oggled, but I did want to give a big shout out to Coleen Rooney today for the six plus month sting operation she’s been running on her IG.

For those not enjoying the rapidly evolving/devolving situation on Twitter, Coleen, having suspected someone on her private account of leaking/selling stories to The S*n, pulled a full-blown canary trap on her subscribers, restricting views to certain (fake) stories over 6 month to work out which ones got reported on, whittling down the number of people she let view the story until she found the leaker.

Long story short, its Rebekah Vardy’s IG, and Coleen has proof.

BOOOOOM. A god level play. Straight from a Tom Clancy novel. Respect.
Tom, (love it when a plan comes together) Walthamstow

 

Spurs nearly team
This morning’s mailbox encapsulated how overrated Spurs are. Sorry, but have Spurs nearly won? Yes, they got to the CL final but they were never in it for more than 4 minutes. They have never even led the league in the last 4 years. Or is it the league? Nearly teams nearly win things or lose gloriously. Neverkusen in 2002 was a nearly team,Hungary in 54,Newcastle in 96,Holland in 74, now those are nearly teams.

Poch’s Spurs have more in common with Wenger’s teams between 06-11. They both got to a CL final after terrible domestic seasons, they both got to the league cup final.They both disrespected cup competitions. They both had Wenger’s team didn’t stumble to the CL final and they actually were closer to winning it.He actually led the league for a while in 07-08.Wenger also didn’t have mega TV deals to help him keep his best players, and for majority of that period had to compete with the best teams in Europe directly in the league as evidenced by the number of times 3 English teams made the CL semi finals during that period.He also didn’t have have his 2 best players(Xesc and Rvp) fit at the same time for very long in that era. Pochettino did not lose a cup final to a team that was eventually relegated that season, mind.

But the major mistake both managers made was not seeing the value of domestic competitions. Wenger actually benched his most inform player for a dn Fa cup semi final and generally used the kiddies in the cups. Man Utd under Fergie got a boost by winning a league  cup in 2006. This as Ferguson as stated helped boost and push them towards further glory later.

Pochettino has been a good manager at Spurs, but his work is overrated. Spurs had finished in the top 4 twice in the 4 years before he was appointed and missed out by 1 point in another year. He has increased their level sure, but let’s calm down on the hyperbole.
Anon

 

Poch is not the root cause of the problems at the Lane
Northern Spur,

I see where you’re coming from but Arsene managed to win four FA cup finals before taking us to the Champions League final and it made sod all difference against Barca.

Also, as much as I love Arsene, he achieved the feat when it was much easier to actually win silverware – over the last few years Poch has had to contend with a Chelsea team and City team taking home two of the three domestic trophies on offer and last season when City managed a clean sweep.

The league cup is generally considered the one that’s winnable but is it really when City and Chelsea have won the last the three. The FA Cup isn’t a banker either as that often has a habit of throwing up the worst possible fixture at the worst possible time.

I may come across as a hypocrite as I was one gooner that rallied against the ‘be careful what you wish for’ crowd when Wenger was manager but as I say I don’t think Poch is the root cause of the problems at the Lane.

Anyhoo – good luck for the season – a strong Spurs side is much better for us as it gets the Arsenal to raise our game.
Graham Simons, Gooner, Norf London

 

Winning is the aim
Oliver Dziggel, Geneva, Switzerland – “When you put it in this context, you can appreciate both how well Pochettino has done over his five years at Spurs, and how drastically the situations at Chelsea, Arsenal, Everton and United have deteriorated.”

Chelsea drastically deteriorated while being the 2014/15 League winners & League Cup winners, 2016/17 League winners, 2017/18 FA Cup winners and 2018/19 Europa League winners, Spurs have done so well whilst winning…

While I know it’s not all about winning that is at least the aim!
John

 

‘And f***ing finally’…
Good Afternoon

Please an you explain to me how you an allow deragatory language in your article shit and dick?

Don’t go about what you are allowed and not allowed. I am sure you have yourself covered. Show some respect to people who browse your website. We have children in our family who browse. And this is what they get educated about instead of getting educated about football.

Please explain,
Antonio Dias

 

Loftus-Cheek had to ‘learn to walk again’ after Chelsea injury

Chelsea midfielder Ruben Loftus-Cheek has revealed he has had to learn to walk again after rupturing his Achilles tendon at the end of last season.

The 23-year-old – who agreed a five-year deal at Stamford Bridge in the summer – suffered the injury playing for the Blues in a friendly against New England Revolution in May and is set to miss a large chunk of this season.

Loftus-Cheek, speaking publicly for the first time since his horrific injury, told soft drink company Wow Hydrate: “I have had to learn to walk again. As soon as I came out of my cast, I could barely lift my heel off the ground in a sitting position. To lift my leg up took maximum effort.

“The big side of injuries is the mental side of it, so I had to stay positive and keep the right mind set. Even a tweet or a message from a fan makes a big difference to me.

“I have actually had a few setbacks that have put me behind which has been quite frustrating. I have only just got pain free but for sure I am going to come back stronger, sharper and do whatever I can to be in better shape.

“When it happened I turned and pushed off and I heard a clap, it was really loud and I thought someone had smashed me from behind. The referee gave a free kick, he blew the whistle so he must have been close to me, but watching the tape back nobody was near me.”

 

 

“To be honest I did not leave my house much, especially as I have been on crutches. I have just been playing on my Xbox, I have been on holiday once, it was not great as my leg was in the cast so I could not swim and it was really warm.

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“I have been at home with my mum, two brothers and my sister, they needed to look after me a lot, it was hard getting around in my cast. It was quite fun getting my sister to make me food all the time! My family have been fantastic through that period.

“With a big injury it is really hard, you do not see a difference everyday, you do not wake up and think it is a lot better every morning, it is over a period of time. It is more exciting the closer I get to making my comeback, the more I keep pushing I will be there soon.

“Before I got injured I was playing my best football. I have missed feeling tired from running, from hard work, that feeling of being in a game again. Everything I have been working towards is for the feeling of stepping back onto that pitch again and I am ready to go.”

 

Barcelona youngsters Alena & Puig prove that La Masia is alive and well

The academy graduates’ performances for the first team in recent days suggest the issues with home-grown talent at Camp Nou may have been exaggerated

The hype wave is in constant motion. On Saturday Carles Alena was riding it, by Thursday it was Riqui Puig being championed.

But the young midfield duo have more potential than most and at Barcelona they could not be in a better place to turn promise into performances, even if the last few years have been a struggle for the club’s feted La Masia academy.

Since the golden generation – Xavi, Andres Iniesta and Carles Puyol who have left, Lionel Messi, Gerard Pique and Sergio Busquets who remain – few have made it from youth level into the first team squad at Camp Nou on a regular basis.

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The one success story is Sergi Roberto, who enjoyed an unlikely transformation under Luis Enrique when deployed out of position at right-back.

Beyond that, frustration. Munir El Haddadi holds a first team place but is rarely called upon and always seems to have one foot out the door.

Sergi Samper remains in the squad but, partially down to repeated injuries, little is expected of a player who once looked to be the natural replacement for Sergio Busquets.

Alena and Puig are different beasts and from the Cadete sides to the Camp Nou, the pair are giving Barcelona fans more hope than they have felt in years about young, home-grown talent.

Both are pure Barca players, midfielders who understand how the team operates, where to run, where to pass and when to do it. Details they have devoured since childhood, details that take new signings months to learn, if they ever do at all.

Alena’s dart behind the defence, found by a sensational Lionel Messi through-ball and finished by the 20-year-old for his first La Liga goal in Barca’s 2-0 win over Villarreal on Sunday, was a run that would go unnoticed playing for any other side.

“It’s much easier when you play with Messi, because only he can pass that ball to you, nobody else would see it,” explained Alena.

It has not been an easy road for the Catalan, who had the wisdom to take a step down this summer to prepare better for his leap up.

The club promised him he would be a first team player this season but an unfortunate injury ruled him out of the summer US tour.

Alena decided, with the help of his agent Ivan de la Pena, to continue with Barca B, rebuilding himself physically until his opportunity came. Others would have demanded their spot in Ernesto Valverde’s squad.

The midfielder, an attacking-minded central player but with a good work ethic and willingness to recover the ball, impressed Barca’s coach with a bright performance from the bench in the first leg of the Copa del Rey round of 32 clash with Cultural Leonesa.

That bought him a substitute appearance in La Liga against Real Betis, and another against Villarreal in which he finished expertly from Messi’s pass.

On Tuesday, he was finally promoted to the first team and given the No. 21 shirt. With Rafinha Alcantara injured for the rest of the season, Alena will have opportunities to cement his status.

“My aim is to give the coach a selection problem when he considers picking the team, for my name to be in his head,” he said.

Despite training with the first team regularly, he maintained his link with the academy sides. During Barcelona’s home clash with Inter in the UEFA Youth League, Alena was in the stands to watch his friends play, and was happy to pose for photos with fans who knew that soon his rise would come.

After all, that was the competition in which he catapulted to fame, scoring a remarkable solo goal against Roma in 2015. Since then his card has been marked for bigger things by the world at large, and earlier still for those who have followed his progress at each youth level.

Puig showed on Wednesday that he too is destined for greater things. The 19-year-old delivered a sublime assist for Denis Suarez in an electric 35-minute cameo in Barca’s 4-1 win over Cultural Leonesa in the second leg of the cup tie.

Although physically tiny, appearing a child among men, Messi and Co have proven size doesn’t matter if you have the right technical and mental attributes, and Puig certainly does.

It seemed clear from the start, which for most was the Rose Bowl in Los Angeles this summer, when he made his non-competitive Barcelona debut against Tottenham in a friendly.

Then 18, he began the year a relative unknown and not even in Barca B’s team yet, but led the club to victory in the UEFA Youth League and trained with the first team for the first time in April.

Puig enjoyed some early luck, getting his chance in the summer thanks to Andre Gomes’s injury, but grasped it with both hands, wowing the crowd with a delicate flick over Christian Eriksen’s head – his own moment to rival Alena’s wonder goal and prick the public consciousness.

The creative midfielder, who is similar in many traits to former captain Andres Iniesta, struggles sometimes with the grim physicality of the Segunda B, but it is all part of a formative experience which will serve him well when he makes the leap up.

His performance against Cultural shows that it really is a question of when, not if, and the player was thrilled with his debut.

“I came to Camp Nou when I was three years old, imagine the hope and excitement I had running out onto the pitch, and even more given that Ernesto gave me 35 minutes, it’s a dream,” he said.

Puig was nervous, he later admitted he was shaking. 

Getting ready for your Camp Nou debut is not a normal sensation. His nerves were understandable. But as soon as Puig’s boots touched grass, he was comfortable again, smiling, because playing football comes to him completely naturally. 

Puig’s dream is the same as that of most Barca fans desperate to see youngsters make it at Camp Nou, fans who were salivating over a midfield trio of Busquets behind the two La Masia gems.

It was the first time that midfield has been deployed, but if all goes to plan, it will not be the last.

Morata is mentally fragile like Saponara – Sarri

The Chelsea striker has struggled since the start of 2018 with his manager comparing him to his former Empoli midfielder

Chelsea coach Maurizio Sarri has again questioned forward Alvaro Morata’s ‘mental fragility’, comparing him to his former Empoli midfielder Riccardo Saponara.

After a bright start to life at Stamford Bridge, Morata has had a difficult time in 2018, scoring just six times in the Premier League since the turn of the year.

Five of those goals have come this term, but his performances have been criticised, with the Spain international often appearing uneasy in front of goal and lacking in confidence.

Sarri believes Morata, 26, is similar to Saponara, who he coached at Empoli earlier in his career.

The former Italy Under-21 international showed enough potential to secure a move to AC Milan, but the 26-year-old’s career is yet to hit the heights many expected.

And Sarri feels Morata has the same type of mental fragility.

“It’s difficult,” Sarri said. “At Empoli I had a wonderful player, Riccardo Saponara, who we sold to AC Milan.

“Saponara was one of the best players I have ever seen, but a little bit mentally fragile.

“Alvaro has scored four or five goals in his last six matches, so I cannot see a big problem. I hope that there will be more this season.

“Every season he scores 15 or 16 goals, so he’s around his average [goal return]. I speak with him every week, but on the pitch he is alone.

“I think that at the moment he’s not playing to his full potential. It’s difficult.”

Chelsea signed Morata from Real Madrid in the summer of 2017 in a deal worth £60 million.

Last month Sarri expressed his doubts about the striker, who is battling Frenchman Olivier Giroud to be Chelsea’s attacking spearhead.

He said: “I think Alvaro has a very great physical and technical potential, so I think he can improve more.

“He’s a little bit fragile from the mental point of view. But he’s very young. I think he can improve, improve very fast.”

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Premier League return? Robben leaving options open after confirming Bayern exit

The Dutchman has been touted for a potential return to England as he prepares to end a decade-long spell in the Bundesliga

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Veteran winger Arjen Robben is keeping his options open following his decision to leave Bayern Munich at the end of the season after being linked with a sensational return to the Premier League.

The 34-year-old has enjoyed a glittering career, which included spells at Chelsea and Real Madrid, before joining Bayern almost a decade ago. 

The Dutchman’s contract runs out at the end of this season and he will be able to move to the club of his choice on a free transfer, should he choose not to hang up his boots for good after confirming he will leave the Allianz Arena .

“[My future’s] still open, anything could still happen. Now was the right time to announce my departure,” Robben told Bayern Munich’s official website . 

“For the fans and the club, everything is clear and everyone knows it’s over at the end of the season.

“I have time to think about my future and what the next step will be. It’s possible that I’ll retire. It could also be good to continue if something interesting comes up.”

However, the prospect of Robben retiring seems unlikely given his recent form, having scored two wonderful goals in his side’s recent Champions League tie against Benfica.

“I’m thankful that at 34 I can still perform at this level as a winger,” he added. “That’s something special and it makes me happy. It would be different if someone said it wasn’t going well any-more and I had to stop. I think it’s better this way. It’s good.

“It’s a bit strange. We’re already talking about saying goodbye but the team has plenty of ambition and I do as well. It makes me happy to see that I can still deliver a top performance in a big European game against Benfica – and may that continue.

“I hope to play an important role right to the end to help the team. My goal is to leave with at least one trophy in the summer.”

Robben was also wanted by Manchester United in 2004 when he joined Chelsea, and his availability on a free transfer is likely to appeal to other Premier League clubs.

He has also been linked with a move to Major League Soccer side the Philadelphia Union.

Ferdinand: Man Utd's 2008 Champions League winners better than this Man City team!

The 40-year-old believes Pep Guardiola’s side are the most entertaining team to watch but isn’t sure they’d get the better of his former team

Rio Ferdinand believes Manchester United’s 2008 side are the best Premier League team ever.

Sir Alex Ferguson’s team from 10 years ago, that possessed the likes of Ferdinand, Nemanja Vidic, Cristiano Ronaldo and Paul Scholes beat Chelsea to win the Champions League in Moscow that season.

They were also crowned Premier League winners, and would go on to win it again a year later, and would also claim the Club World Cup in December 2008.

Ferdinand made 51 appearances in all competitions for the Red Devils in 2007-08, forming a formidable partnership at centre-back alongside former Serbia international Vidic.

And he feels that team is the best in Premier League history, claiming that they were better than Pep Guardiola’s current Manchester City side that accumulated 100 points last season as they won the title with ease.

When asked opinion on the greatest Premier League side ever, Ferdinand told BT Sport: “The 2008 Man United team. Won in Moscow, back-to-back finals in the Champions League. Four [sic] Premier League titles on the bounce. Talk to me!”

City have undoubtedly made a case to be considered as of one of the best ever in the Premier League era, sweeping to the title last season with a gap of 19 points ahead of second-placed Manchester United.

They achieved the highest points tally ever in that incredible campaign, while they also set the record for most wins (32), most goals (106) and biggest goal difference (plus 79).

And they’ve continued in a similarly impressive fashion in 2018-19, leading the way at the top of the standings, albeit with Liverpool having the chance to go above them, and scoring 45 league goals already.

Ferdinand may not believe they are the best side in English top-flight history but he has acknowledged their quality and believes they are the most entertaining team to watch.

He added: “They’re the most entertaining team we’ve ever seen in the Premier League era. They’re the best team to watch, they play the best football. They’re unbelievable.

“Tactically I think they’re the most astute, they’re the most fine-tuned team we’ve seen. They’d give any team in the Premier League era a run for their money.”

Next up for City is an away fixture against Chelsea on Saturday, while United host Fulham as they look to end a run of four league games without a win.

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O'Hara: USWNT aiming for back-to-back World Cups, but not embracing role as favorites

The defender is eyeing a second consecutive title but following the 2016 Olympics, the team isn’t taking anything for granted.

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The U.S. women’s national team enters every tournament with a certain level of expectations. It’s natural for a team that’s won four Olympic gold medals and three World Cup titles, including a triumph in the last World Cup in Canada.

Heading into the 2019 World Cup, if the USWNT aren’t the favorites, they’re certainly among them. It’s a distinction that defender Kelley O’Hara says is embraced in some ways and condemned in others.

On Saturday, the USWNT were drawn into a group alongside Thailand, Chile and, most importantly, perennial rivals Sweden ahead of the tournament in France. It’s not the Group of Death like that of 2015, but it’s a three-match run that will certainly end in a test with that Sweden match.

Heading into France, the U.S. is the No. 1 ranked team in the world with high expectations but, if the 2016 Olympics defeat to Sweden taught us anything, it’s that favorites don’t always become champions

O’Hara was a member of both that 2015 World Cup squad and the 2016 Olympic team. Since breaking through with the USWNT, O’Hara has learned what it means to be seen as the front-runner, and the difficulties that come with it. 

“I would never place us as ‘favorites’, or put it on us,” O’Hara told reporters following the draw. “But we do hold ourselves to a very high standard and, yeah, we want to win. Who doesn’t want to win the World Cup? Being the defending champions, I absolutely want to go back to back.”

O’Hara called the group draw “serendipitous” given the familiarity of all the teams involved. The USWNT thrashed Chile 3-0 and 4-0 just this year. They took down Thailand 9-0 this cycle. Sweden is a traditional rival, one the USWNT will look to seek a bit of revenge on following a draw at the 2015 World Cup and a defeat on penalties at the 2016 Olympics.

The field heading into 2019 is as strong as ever as teams like hosts France, Germany, England, Canada and Australia all loom large.

“The gap between the top-ranked team and the lowest in this World Cup is much closer than it ever has been, in terms of just level of play,” O’Hara said. “That is attributed to federations investing more time and money into their female program which, I think, needs to continue. It’s just starting and it’s only going to get better, but it does need that investment from the federations.

“I think they’ll be pleasantly surprised to see that the competition is going to be stiff and exciting.”

Since the last World Cup, the U.S. has lost matches to England, France and Australia as the team has undergone a rebuild. The 2017 campaign was headlined by that trio of defeats, including a historic 3-0 battering at the hands of France that signaled a number of big issues with the team.

The USWNT have won 18 of their 20 matches this year though, with the other two being draws, as the team has seemingly found its form. Along the way, the USWNT has defeated the likes of Germany, England, Japan and Brazil before coasting through Concacaf qualifying.

“Obviously we went through a pretty big transition period after the Olympics and [head coach Jill Ellis] was very transparent about that to the media and to us,” O’Hara said. “Since then, it was growing pains growing through that. It’s been a consistent group now and that’s important for us to grow in terms of chemistry.

“These next six months leading into the first game, starting in January, this will be the time we come together as a team and focus on ourselves, on the style of play and honing the tools we already have.”

The road in France will be the toughest one yet for the USWNT and, if the infamous Olympic loss to Sweden is any indication, there isn’t anything guaranteed anymore. For years, it was the U.S. and then everyone else. No longer.

That’s exciting for O’Hara, who has earned 112 caps and appeared in two World Cups and two Olympic games. Still, the process is still as exciting and nerve-wracking as ever.

“I’m pumped. So excited,” she said. “It’s nice to finally know who our competition is going to be in those first three games. We can start to prepare and envision who is going to be on the other side of the field. It’s just nice to know.

“It feels real today,” she added. “I have a headache after watching that. I think that my stress levels went up a bit just because of the excitement, knowing what it is. Now that the draw has happened, the brackets are filled, the groups are filled, it’s real. It’s happening. It’s going to be here before we know it.”

Manchester United vs Arsenal: TV channel, live stream, squad news & preview

The Red Devils head into a clash with their buoyant rivals under pressure after a poor weekend draw against Southampton

Manchester United’s top-four aspirations already hang in the balance ahead of a crucial Premier League fixture against Arsenal at Old Trafford on Wednesday.

Jose Mourinho’s side were held 2-2 by Southampton on Saturday – and it could have been worse as they trailed 2-0 – leaving them eight points off the Champions League qualification positions.

While the Red Devils fade, the Gunners continue to enjoy a stunning new lease of life under manager Unai Emery, whose latest success was a 4-2 derby victory over Tottenham at the Emirates.

It would be a futher affirmation that Arsenal are back as a force to be reckoned with if they were to heap more misery upon Mourinho and his bedraggled squad.

Game Manchester United vs Arsenal
Date Wednesday, December 5
Time 8pm GMT/5pm ET


In the United States (US), the game can be watched on NBC and streamed via NBCSports.com.

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US TV channel Online stream
NBCSN NBCSports.com

In the United Kingdom (UK), the game will be broadcast live on TV on BT Sport 1 and BT Sport 4K UHD. It can be streamed from the BT Sport app.

UK TV channel Online stream
BT Sport 1 BT Sport app


Position Manchester United squad
Goalkeepers De Gea, Grant, Romero
Defenders Rojo, Smalling, Lindelof, Jones, Bailly, Young, Dalot, Shaw, Valencia, Darmian
Midfielders Pogba, Mata, Matic, McTominay, Herrera, Lingard, Pereira, Fred, Fellaini, Gomes, Hamilton
Forwards Sanchez, Lukaku, Rashford, Martial, Chong, Bohui

Man Utd starting XI: De Gea; Bailly, Smalling, Rojo; Dalot, Herrera, Matic, Darmian; Lingard, Rashford, Martial

Position Arsenal squad
Goalkeepers Cech, Leno, Martinez
Defenders Bellerin, Sokratis, Koscielny, Monreal, Mustafi, Holding, Lichtsteiner, Mavropanos, Kolasinac, Medley, Piguezuelo
Midfielders Elneny, Mkhitaryan, Ramsey, Ozil, Guendouzi, Torreira, Maitland-Niles, Iwobi, Xhaka, Smith Rowe, Willock
Forwards Lacazette, Aubameyang, Welbeck, Nketiah

Arsenal starting XI: Leno; Mustafi, Sokratis, Holding; Bellerin, Torreira, Guendouzi, Kolasinac; Ramsey, Iwobi; Aubameyang



Manchester United are slender 29/20 favourites with bet365 . Arsenal are priced at 2/1 while a draw is 5/2.

Click here to see more offers for the game, including goalscoring markets, correct score predictions and more.



Jose Mourinho’s third-season syndrome seems set to continue at Old Trafford, with Manchester United’s prospects of winning the Premier League title already scant before the Portuguese had a chance to open the first door on his advent calendar.

The Red Devils’ prospects took another blow on Saturday, when a side with a makeshift defence toiled to draw 2-2 at Southampton. United did well to rally to get on terms by the break after falling two behind, but in the second half they fell pitifully short of finding a winner.

Mourinho, however, remains bullish ahead of a fixture that could see United drop 11 points off the Champions League pace if they were to lose.

“We have eight or nine points from fourth, something like that, I don’t think we need a miracle at all,” he said on Tuesday.

“We need a good run of results, not waste points we shouldn’t waste. Last week, before the Crystal Palace game, I told my hopes and targets were that at the end of December to be in the top four. The target changed, but in the sense let’s try to close the distance best we can and be very close to these positions.

“I think far from a miracle, we just need to not be so unlucky with problems that we have, we need some players to perform better than they are. We need to perform better as a team, but far from a miracle.”

While he remains under severe scrutiny over both his playing style and results, Unai Emery in the Arsenal dugout has rapidly won fans over.

The Spaniard had no honeymoon period at the club as he suffered defeats to Manchester City and Chelsea in his first two matches, but has since negotiated an undefeated run of 19 matches in all competitions that has the Gunners back where they feel they belong.

A stunning 4-2 derby victory over Tottenham helped to affirm the feel-good spirit that currently envelopes the club, with the Emirates rocking as strikes from Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang (two), Lucas Torreira and Alexandre Lacazette produced the type of display so long missed by fans.

Three points on Wednesday and there will be no doubt about it: Arsenal would be back.

USWNT announces 10 games in 2019 leading up to World Cup

The defending champions now know their entire schedule ahead of the showpiece in France next summer

U.S. Soccer has announced the U.S. women’s national team schedule leading up to the 2019 World Cup, a 10-game series the federation has dubbed the “Countdown to the Cup.”

Eight of the 10 games will take place in the United States, with the USWNT opening its 2019 campaign with matches in Europe against France on January 19 and at Spain three days later. 

The 10 matches will also include the SheBelieves Cup, a three-game tournament against powers Japan, England and Brazil set to take place in late February and early March. 

After friendlies against Australia and Brazil in early April, the U.S. will then embark on a three-match “Send-Off Series” against South Africa, a yet-to-be-determined opponent, and Mexico. 

From there, the USWNT will head to France as it looks to become the second team to successfully defend a Women’s World Cup tittle. 

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“This schedule checks a lot of important boxes in our preparation for the World Cup,” head coach Jill Ellis said in a federation release. “We’ll get to experience a variety of teams in regard to their strengths and styles of play and almost all of the countries will be in their World Cup preparation as well.

“We are playing tough games in Europe, which is vitally important, and also get to play quality opponents in front of our home fans at venues all across the USA. It will go fast, but these games will be a major factor in pushing us to be at our peak once we arrive in France next summer.”

The U.S. will learn its fate for the World Cup on Saturday, when the Final draw will be held in Paris.

Full USWNT schedule below

Date Opponent Location Time (ET)
Jan. 19 France Le Havre, France 2:30 p.m.
Jan. 22 Spain Alicante, Spain  2:30 p.m.
Feb. 27 Japan (SheBelieves Cup) Chester, Pa. 7 p.m.
March 2 England (SheBelieves Cup) Nashville, Tenn. 4:30 p.m.
March 5 Brazil (SheBelieves Cup) Tampa, Fla.  8 p.m.
April 4 Australia Commerce City, Colo. 9 p.m.
April 7 Belgium Los Angeles, Calif. 9 p.m.
May 12 South Africa (Send-Off Series) Santa Clara, Calif. 4:30 p.m.
May 16

TBD (Send-Off Series)

St. Louis, Mo. 8 p.m.
May 26 Mexico (Send-Off Series) Harrison, N.J. 12 p.m.