Liverpool boss Klopp: ‘In our case, these are our transfers’

Jurgen Klopp has explained why contract extensions are Liverpool’s transfer this summer as he oversees a quiet transfer window.

The Reds have made just two signings this summer in the form of Sepp van den Berg from PEC Zwolle and Harvey Elliott from Fulham, neither of which are likely to feature in the starting XI this campaign.

And, after winning the Champions League and pushing Manchester City extremely close in the Premier League title race, there are obvious arguments for not needing to strengthen this summer.

“That’s actually our transfers, but nobody’s interested in hearing that really because that’s how it is,” Klopp told ESPN FC why Liverpool’s contract extensions of key players are their transfers this summer.

“You have a player, he’s good, you want to keep him, if he signs a new contract then for a few people, it means only that he will be more expensive when we sell him or whatever, or that it doesn’t mean anything nowadays.

“In our case, these are our transfers. The new contracts and keeping these boys here is a strong, strong signal for the outside world. It’s wonderful sign, to be honest. I like the fact that these boys are really at a good football age.

“They won the European Cup, which is good and helps of course because it increases your base.”

 

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Moyes questions Man United’s ‘difficult’ transfer policy

David Moyes believes it has been “difficult” to decipher Manchester United’s transfer policy in recent years.

United have made two signings this summer, with Daniel James and Aaron Wan-Bissaka both fitting their young, British and buzzy criteria.

With Harry Maguire and Sean Longstaff two other primary targets, United are prioritising more homegrown talents – although Bruno Fernandes has been perennially linked.

Moyes, whose only four signings in his ten months in charge at Old Trafford were Guillermo Varela, Marouane Fellaini, Saidy Janko and Juan Mata, feels Ole Gunnar Solskjaer has finally moved away from “signing players for marketing”.

“For a while it would be difficult to know what direction United have gone in,” he told the Daily Mirror.

“Whether they have been signing players for marketing, which they are fantastic at, or whether it has been signing players for on the pitch, I am not quite sure.

“What Manchester United had was great values and class. Manchester United’s values weren’t always to buy the most expensive players but to do it their way which was bringing in the boys from the academy and picking up the best young players.

“Now and again there would be a sprinkling of stardust, like an Eric Cantona, or someone who they signed to make the difference, like Robin van Persie.

“I never thought they were a club who thought it was all about spending the money, but if they needed to, they could.

“They have now chosen to sign some young players, and when you look back they signed Wayne Rooney from us at ­Everton aged 18. Cristiano Ronaldo was also 18 when he joined, so over the years they have had a policy of signing young players and many of them have been the best up-and-coming future stars.

“I think Man United just need to follow their values of old.”

 

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Man Utd launch bid for £66m Harry Maguire alternative

Manchester United have made an attempt to sign Benfica defender Ruben Dias as an alternative to signing Harry Maguire, according to reports.

United are desperate to land Maguire before the August 8 transfer deadline, with the centre-half having become ‘frustrated’ at the move being blocked.

Various reports suggest Ole Gunnar Solskjaer’s side have had a £60m bid rejected as Leicester hold out for closer to £80m.

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The Foxes believe the England international should generate a higher fee than the £75m it took Liverpool to sign Virgil van Dijk from Southampton in 2018.

The Daily Mail say that United’s latest offer of £72m plus add-ons will therefore be rejected, as they ‘need to pay a greater percentage’ up front.

And now Portuguese newspaper O Jogo (via Sport Witness) claims that United have tried to sign centre-back Dias recently.

The 22-year-old’s release clause is set at €66m but the bid must have been below that as the Red Devils were knocked back by Benfica president Luis Felipe Vieira.

Benfica are in no rush to sell anymore players after raising €200m in player sales this summer and United would have to trigger Dias’ release clause.

The report adds that the Portuguese outfit are in discussions with Dias over increasing his release clause to €88m – but the player is likely to want a large wage rise.

 

Real make shock transfer U-turn with Man Utd repercussions

Real Madrid have blocked Gareth Bale’s move to the Chinese Super League.

Zinedine Zidane confirmed that Bale was on the verge of leaving the club last week, hoping that it would be confirmed soon “for everyone’s sake”.

Bale was expected to move to Jiangsu Suning for nothing, with the club requesting not to pay a fee to help fund his eye-watering £1.1m-a-week wages.

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But Real have blocked Bale’s departure and the Welshman is now likely to stay in Spain beyond the summer.

David Ornstein has taken a break from revealing Nicolas Pepe’s move to Arsenal to claim that Real have ‘cancelled’ the deal, with John Percy of the Daily Telegraph reporting that talks ‘have broken down’ due to ‘demands’ made by the selling club.

Real are unsurprisingly thought to want a fee for a player they signed for £85.3m in 2013, with club president Florentino Perez deeming Bale ‘too valuable a player to let go on the cheap’.

With the Chinese transfer window closing on Wednesday, a deal now seems incredibly unlikely.

Real’s sudden change of heart will inevitably impact their own transfer dealings, with Bale’s earnings restricting their hopes of continuing a remarkable spate of spending this summer.

It was claimed that Paul Pogba would inherit his £600,000-a-week wages upon his £180m move from Manchester United, but with Real having already racked up a net spend of around £160m, that now seems far from reality.

 

Foreign nationals involved in Tokyo Olympics prep to get special long-stay visas

With about a year to go until the start of the 2020 Tokyo Olympics and Paralympics, the government has kicked off a special initiative allowing foreign nationals involved in preparations to obtain long-term visas.

The visas are expected to be given to about 700 people, such as those from the International Olympic Committee, sports federations, television stations with broadcasting rights and sponsor corporations.

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It is the first time for Japan to issue special visas for people involved in the Olympics. Foreign personnel involved in the 1964 Tokyo Summer Games, the 1972 Sapporo Winter Games and the 1998 Nagano Winter Games had to apply for back-to-back short-term visas to extend their stays.

Tokyo 2020 organizers requested that the government grant long-term visas on the grounds that the upcoming games will be larger in scale than when Japan hosted the Olympics in the past.

On June 17, the government added individuals nominated by the organizing committee to the list of those eligible to receive long-term visas under the designated activities category. The category is usually applied to amateur sports players and people working for diplomats.

Three types of visas allowing holders to stay for three months, six months and a year will be issued to people involved in the games. The permits can be renewed through around summer 2021, when post-games work is expected to be completed.

Holders of these visas will also be allowed to bring their spouses and children to Japan.

Japan grapples with putting family or given name first ahead of 2020 Tokyo Olympics

With around a year to go until the start of the 2020 Tokyo Olympic and Paralympic Games, the age-old question of whether to put family or given name first when writing Japanese names in English has started to garner attention.

The issue was recently put into the spotlight by Foreign Minister Taro Kono, who suggested in May that major foreign media organizations should write the name of Prime Minister Shinzo Abe as “Abe Shinzo,” with the family name coming first.

But the proposed change prompted strong push-back by those who claimed that the reversal of long-standing customs would cause confusion. Even Abe’s own Cabinet members were divided over the proposal, with Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga saying that his given name should come first in English.

When Japanese names are written in Japanese, the family name customarily comes first, followed by the given name. But when rendered in Roman script, they are written in the opposite order, in line with Western tradition.

According to professor Yasuyuki Shimizu, who specializes in Japanese language studies at Japan Women’s University, the earliest public records of Japanese names in English script were written with the family name preceding the given name.

When the Tokugawa shogunate, rulers of nation during the Edo Period (1603-1868), concluded the Treaty of Peace and Amity with the United States, the first treaty between the two countries, in 1854, the Japanese interpreter signed the treaty in English with the family name first.

But English-language magazines published in Japan started to put given names first for Japanese names from the 1880s, and the style was popularized in the 1890s.

A report drawn up by a now-defunct Japanese language council at the Cultural Affairs Agency in 2000 attributed the change in style to the effects of Europeanization in Japan during the Meiji Era (1868-1912).

The report went on to say that putting the family name first was desirable from the perspective of “linguistic and cultural diversity.” This was reflected in English textbooks used at junior high schools in Japan, which currently put Japanese people’s names in order of family name and then given name.

The agency had originally planned to call on government bodies and media organizations to adopt the family-name-first style, but it halted the move due to disagreements within the government.

Calls to put the family name first have also sprung up from the general public.

One such advocate is Shoichi Hasegawa, an executive of Jichi Medical University.

Hasegawa, 61, first took notice of the issue while working as expatriate staff in Paris for the now-defunct Home Affairs Ministry about three decades ago. He found that, while French people called each other with the given name first, it was not strange to find the family name preceding the given name in official documents.

This confusion about name order, he said, continued after he returned to Japan. During the Olympic Games, Hasegawa noticed that Chinese and South Korean athletes’ names were displayed with the family name first, in line with their cultural customs, while the names of Japanese athletes were displayed with the given name first.

Seeing the upcoming Tokyo Games as an opportunity for change, Hasegawa started contacting former ministry colleagues and friends from school in March to call for having the family name put before the given name. Support for the change gradually grew after a former colleague and current member of the Diet took up the call, when the statement by Kono was issued.

But Hasegawa said that it is not necessary to coerce people to adopt the family-name-first style.

“Government offices and the media should unify around family name first, given name second, but on an individual level, it should be left up to people,” he said.

Cloudiest Tokyo summer in 129 years leaves Japan’s retailers hurting

The unusually long and cool rainy season has dampened demand for apparel, furniture and other goods, with some retailers already reporting steep drops in merchandise sales.

Shimamura Co., a chain of affordable clothing shops, reported last week that same-store sales through July 20 fell 18 percent from a year earlier. Many of Shimamura’s customers reach the company’s 1,433 locations in Japan via bicycle rather than car, so rainy days tend to have an outsized impact on revenue, a spokeswoman said.

So far, Tokyo has seen only about 44 daylight hours in July, among the least since the Meteorological Agency began keeping records in 1890. There was one less Sunday this year compared with July 2018, and rain and overcast skies also appear to be keeping people at home, especially on weekends. Given that Japan’s retailers, especially Uniqlo operator Fast Retailing Co., are sensitive to seasonal weather trends, they will probably report weaker monthly sales in the coming week, according to Michael Allen, an analyst at Jefferies.

“All apparel retailers are likely to have suffered,” Allen wrote in a report, adding that the average temperature from July 1 to 25 was 22.7 degrees (73 F), compared with 28.3 a year earlier.

Right On Co., an apparel company with 495 shops and a web store, reported a 5.9 percent decline in same-store sales through July 20, pointing to weak demand for summer clothing. Furniture retailer Nitori Holdings Co. posted a 5.6 percent drop in same-store sales through the same period, as fewer people bought bedding and other seasonal products. Representatives for Nitori and Right On declined to comment.

Shimamura’s shares fell 3.5 percent on Wednesday after reporting its lowest monthly same-store sales since 2003. Fast Retailing hit a record of ¥69,810 on July 12 and the shares are up 19 percent this year, bolstered by overseas sales.

The Meteorological Agency hasn’t yet declared an end to this year’s rainy season. Last year’s season was unusually short, and officially ended on June 29 for the Kanto area, which includes Tokyo. That’s also likely to exaggerate comparisons this year.

The chilly weather hurt demand for summer outfits, such as women’s short-sleeve shirts and undergarments, Shimamura said. United Arrows, which has more than a dozen fashion brands, may have been able to mitigate the impact of the weather because a fifth of their sales are online, a spokeswoman said. Some customers also buy fashion items earlier for autumn regardless of the recent temperature, she added.

“While customer traffic at physical stores of apparel companies could be affected by the rainy season in July, shoppers likely switched to buy online,” said Catherine Lim, an analyst at Bloomberg Intelligence. “The impact to overall sales for larger companies with an established e-commerce platform such as Fast Retailing may be less severe.”

A son’s struggle for acquittal in deadly 1949 Mitaka train crash

Kenichiro Takeuchi has gone through numerous hardships as the son of a former death row inmate who was convicted of carrying out a mysterious fatal train accident in chaotic postwar Japan.

While leading a life of obscurity and changing jobs nearly a dozen times, Takeuchi, 76, lives with the dream of his father being exonerated posthumously for what he believes was a wrongful conviction.

His father, Keisuke, a labor union member and former train driver for the now-defunct Japanese National Railways, was sentenced to death for sabotaging a train at Mitaka Station in Tokyo on the evening of July 15, 1949, killing six people and injuring 20 others.

He proclaimed his innocence until his death, despite initially confessing he was behind the crash.

“I’ve never opened up about my father to my colleagues. … I have developed a gloomy character,” the younger Takeuchi said in a recent interview at his home in the suburbs of Tokyo about what became known as the Mitaka Incident.

While seeking a retrial, his father died of a brain tumor in prison in 1967 at the age of 45.

“I was told that the death of my father closed the case. But I felt so sorry for him being convicted for something he never did,” the son said.

The case was revived more than 40 years later when a lawyer, Shoji Takamizawa, visited Kenichiro Takeuchi in 2009.

Takamizawa, 77, had examined judicial records of the Mitaka Incident that convinced him of Keisuke Takeuchi’s innocence, and he strongly urged the son to seek a retrial on behalf of his father.

“I was glad that Mr. Takamizawa visited me, as I couldn’t have done anything for my father by myself. … I thought I finally found a small ray of hope,” said the son, who on the advice of Takamizawa filed an appeal for a retrial with the Tokyo High Court in 2011.

Kenichiro Takeuchi, who has also struggled with cancer, is awaiting the court’s decision on whether to reopen the case, with expectations that such good news might bring him some solace after so many years.

Keisuke Takeuchi was arrested and indicted, together with nine other labor union members, at a time when the nationwide railway operator was looking to make massive job cuts. Other than Takeuchi, all the defendants were members of the Japanese Communist Party, which opposed the layoffs.

Takeuchi initially denied his involvement. But he later repeatedly changed his story — admitting to a conspiracy with the other defendants, then saying he had acted alone to plan and execute the entire incident, before finally claiming his innocence once again.

Despite a lack of conclusive evidence, he eventually received a death sentence based mostly on his confession. The nine other defendants were acquitted as it was ruled that Takeuchi alone was responsible for the disaster.

During an initial petition for a retrial before his death, Takeuchi claimed he had made a false confession in the belief that he might at least evade the death penalty.

In the incident, the victims were crushed by the seven-car train, which suddenly started moving at the Mitaka Station yard, bursting through a bumper at the end of the track and plowing into the station as well as some nearby buildings before finally coming to a halt.

As part of efforts to persuade the high court to reopen the decades-old case, Takamizawa, along with five other lawyers, worked to find “new evidence” to prove Takeuchi’s innocence with the help of several experts.

The final ruling found that Takeuchi had raised the first car’s pantograph — the apparatus mounted on the roof of the train to collect power — to activate the train, and then jumped off shortly after that.

Countering this, the lawyers cited a traffic engineering expert’s study that said that the pantograph of the second car was also raised when the train went out of control.

The lawyers also focused on the fact that the headlight of the seventh car was on when the disaster occurred, claiming that it should have been turned off in accordance with the JNR’s operating guidelines before the train was activated.

Given these factors, the lawyers note in their opinion paper submitted to the high court, “It was impossible for (Takeuchi), in terms of time, to raise pantographs of the first and second cars and run to the seventh car to turn on the headlight, thus the final ruling that he committed the crime alone is unacceptable, and should be reviewed.”

Prosecutors have argued the headlight was already turned on before the incident.

In the original trial a man testified that he saw Takeuchi near Mitaka Station around the time of the incident.

In an effort to debunk the testimony, Takamizawa and other lawyers for the defense asked a behavioral psychologist to conduct an experiment to determine if the witness would have been able to identify Takeuchi under evening viewing conditions.

In a recreation of the scene examining several test subjects — only a few of whom could recognize acquaintances — the psychologist concluded that it would have been almost impossible for the witness to recognize Takeuchi’s face clearly even under the brighter conditions in the experiment.

The lawyers also believe, based on confession statements by Takeuchi and his wife compiled soon after his arrest, that Takeuchi was at home with his family when the tragedy occurred.

The defense team presented these findings during talks with the high court and prosecutors that were completed last December.

“Objective evidence goes against Mr. Takeuchi’s temporary confession and the final ruling, and it is quite obvious that he was sentenced to death unfairly,” Takamizawa said. “We have to correct errors of the judicial system.”

The prosecutors, however, have claimed the final ruling was reasonable and confirmed Takeuchi’s guilt, and are seeking the dismissal of the appeal.

Kenichiro Takeuchi has survived his wife, who believed in her father-in-law’s innocence until her death and welcomed the unexpected encounter with Takamizawa.

But he has become estranged from his siblings after taking up the crusade.

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“My brothers and sisters do not want me to come forward in seeking the retrial, but their attitude will change if the high court comes to a good decision within my lifetime,” he said.

The Mitaka Incident was one of three mysterious cases involving the Japanese National Railways in the summer of 1949.

On July 6, JNR President Sadanori Shimoyama was found dead in Tokyo, apparently run over by a train, while on Aug. 17, a passenger train derailed near Matsukawa Station in Fukushima Prefecture due to alleged sabotage, killing three crew members and leading to the indictment of 20 labor union activists, all of whom were eventually acquitted.

The truth surrounding the Shimoyama and Matsukawa incidents remains a mystery.

The three incidents were widely believed to be linked to JNR’s efforts to introduce job dismissals under the U.S.-led Occupation, with union activists targeted by authorities in an attempt to clamp down on the protest campaign against the layoffs.

‘Fresh bid’ for Pepe expected as Arsenal still ‘lead race’

Arsenal are ‘in advanced talks’ with Nicolas Pepe after agreeing a £72m fee with Lille.

BBC Sport’s David Ornstein revealed that the Gunners had made a breakthrough in negotiations over the Ivory Coast forward, with the deal expected to go through by the end of the week.

They are far from the only suitors for Pepe however, with up to five clubs thought to have either agreed a fee with Lille or expressed a strong interest in doing so.

Napoli are known to be among them after Carlo Ancelotti confirmed as such, and The Guardian suggest they will table a ‘fresh bid’ in the coming days.

They add that Arsenal ‘lead the race’ however, and ‘are understood to be in advanced talks’ over a five-year contract offer.

The Sun claim that Pepe is still waiting on an offer from Manchester United, but they’re a little busy chasing John McGinn.

 

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Wolves sign Spain U21 defender from Real Madrid

Wolves have signed Real Madrid defender Jesus Vallejo on a season-long loan.

The Premier League club announced the move on their official website and Vallejo joins on the back of captaining Spain to European Under-21 Championship glory this summer.

Vallejo made seven of his 19 Real appearances last season and recovered from injury to net his first LaLiga goal against Villarreal in May.

The 22-year-old has had previous loan spells at Real Zaragoza and with Eintracht Frankfurt in Germany.

Vallejo, who has won 22 caps for Spain’s under-21 side, watched his new team beat Crusaders 2-0 at Molineux on Thursday and could now make his debut in the second leg of the Europa League tie next week.

Wolves’ previous summer business saw them turn the loan moves of Raul Jimenez and Leander Dendoncker into permanent deals.

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