Showing posts with label Manchester City. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Manchester City. Show all posts

Manchester City, Marseille win in UEFA Cup

HAMBURG - Manchester City bagged a 2-0 victory over Denmark’s Aalborg, while Italians Udinese hit holders Zenit St Petersburg with two late goals in first-leg matches in the pre-quarterfinals of the UEFA Cup.

Elsewhere Thursday there were narrow wins for Olympique Marseille, Werder Bremen, Dynamo Kiev and CSKA Moscow, while Galatasaray earned a 1-1 draw at SV Hamburg.

Holders Zenit fell to goals by Fabio Quagliarella five minutes from time and a penalty seven minutes into stoppage play by Antonio di Natale at Italians Udinese.

The Russians ended the game with 10 men after a second booking for Roman Shirokov following the penalty award.

Ecuador striker Felipe Caicedo struck early for Manchester City and Sean Wright-Phillips added a second after half an hour as Manchester City ran out 2-0 winners over Aalborg.

Olympique Marseille were the only one of the French trio to triumph, earning a 2-1 win over Ajax who had defender Gregory van der Wiel sent off after a second booking in the 42nd minute.

Benoit Cheyrou in the 18th and Mamadou Niang in the 33rd put Olympique in control but a 36th-minute strike from Luis Suarez gives the Dutch side every chance in the return leg.

SV Hamburg were unable to overcome a 10-man Galatasaray in a 1-1 draw.

The Turkish side, who won the competition in 2000, had Emre Asik sent off in the 53rd minute for a professional foul on Mladen Petric.

The dismissal came four minutes after Marcell Jansen had levelled a 32nd-minute goal from midfielder Ayhan Akman.

Collin Benjamin came close to a winner for the Bundesliga side with a shot headed off the line and onto the bar by Mehmet Guven.

But with 12,000 fans behind them among the 52,000 crowd in Hamburg, the Turkish side defended solidly for a draw they will be pleased with for the second leg next Thursday.

‘The 1-1 draw has put us in a good position but our biggest advantage are our fans,’ Galatasaray coach Bulent Korkmaz said in reference to the atmosphere expected next week inside the Ali Sami Yen stadium in Istanbul.

Hamburg’s northern neighbours Werder Bremen earned a 1-0 win over St Etienne, courtesy of a goal in the 20th minute by Brazilian central defender Naldo, but coach Thomas Schaaf said he was disappointed with his team’s performance.

‘We didn’t play the way we wanted,’ he said.

‘We allowed St Etienne to come back in the game. There was no clear play in the second half and you can’t be satisfied with that.’

A minute’s silence was observed before both games in Germany in memory of Wednesday’s school massacre near Stuttgart in which 16 people were killed.

Elsewhere, tournament top scorer Vagner Love notched his 11th of the campaign with a penalty five minutes after the break to give 2005 winners CSKA Moscow a 1-0 victory over Ukraine outfit Shakhtar Donetsk.

In an all-Ukrainian duel, Dynamo Kiev edged Metalist Kharkiv 1-0 thanks a 54th-minute winner from Ognjen Vukojevic, while Paris St Germain were held to a goalless draw by Portugal’s Sporting Braga.
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Man City make mark on window despite Kaka rebuff

London, Feb 03: Manchester City failed with one of the most audacious transfer bids of all time but despite Kaka's refusal to leave AC Milan the world's richest club still left their fingerprints all over the January transfer window.

As a statement of intent City's 100 million pounds (USD 143.1 million) offer was about as bold as it gets and, undeterred by the Brazil playmaker's rebuff, they spent about 50 million pounds on more modest players.

Real Madrid were also in the market thanks to City's largesse, most of the USD 50 million they spent on Klaas-Jan Huntelaar and Lassana Diarra coming after the sale of Robinho to the Premier League club last year.

The only other serious money being spent was by Tottenham Hotspur, another Premier League club with billionaire backing who completed an unusual buy-back programme by re-signing Robbie Keane from Liverpool on deadline day.

Elsewhere, belts were being tightened.

There were hardly any significant deals in Germany or France, no one spent like Real in Spain and Manchester United's closest rivals in England were strangely quiet.

Arsenal were haggling over a deal for Zenit St Petersburg's Andrei Arshavin, Liverpool shipped Keane back to Tottenham without a replacement up their sleeve and Chelsea were bit-part players.

The lack of noise from some of Europe's biggest clubs was perhaps the most eloquent statement about the transfer market during this global credit crunch.

Ambitious Plans

City, owned by Abu Dhabi billionaire Sheikh Mansour bin Zayad al Nahyan, have no such problems as they try to break into the elite and they certainly made the big clubs take notice with their bid for Kaka.

"It was a big, bold statement of intent," Dan Jones, editor of the Deloitte Annual Review of Football Finance, told reporters.

"They were saying they wanted a place at the top table, not to be just another Premier League club.”

"I said before that even if it didn't go through it would move them to the next level and I think that's happened."

In business that City did manage to conclude, in came Nigel de Jong from Hamburg SV for 16 million pounds, Craig Bellamy from West Ham United and Wayne Bridge from Chelsea for slightly smaller fees and Shay Given, the Newcastle United goalkeeper, for an estimated seven million pounds.

Tottenham re-signed Jermain Defoe from Portsmouth for 15 million pounds, risked almost as much on buying Wilson Palacios from Wigan Athletic and also brought back France defender Pascal Chimbonda from Sunderland.

Brisk Business

They then managed to conclude the deal for Liverpool misfit Keane, despite the appalling weather on deadline day. Media reports said they would pay around 15 of the 20 million pounds Liverpool forked out for the Ireland forward six months ago.

Manchester United could afford to take a long-term view by signing youngsters Zoran Tosic and Adem Ljajic from Partizan Belgrade for an estimated 16 million pounds.

The transfer window in France was quiet.

Olympique Marseille signed Brazilian Brandao from Shakhtar Donetsk and Sylvain Wiltord on a six-month loan from Stade Rennes but there were few other deals of note.

Hamburg have so far kept the De Jong money to themselves while Bayern Munich eventually spent big on Zenit's Anatoliy Tymoshchuk, for an estimated 14 million euros (USD 17.89 million), but he will only arrive once the season is over.

It was a similar story in Italy as speculation about Inter Milan bidding for Chelsea's Didier Drogba came to nothing.

AC Milan's one significant deal was to draft in David Beckham on a loan deal that could be extended.

It was that sort of transfer period, plenty to talk about but outside the Premier League, little money changing hands.
READ MORE - Man City make mark on window despite Kaka rebuff

Man City woe after defeat to 10-man Stoke

London, Jan 31: Manchester City signed off on a miserable month on Saturday when their expensively assembled team were beaten 1-0 away by a Stoke City team who played more than half the game with 10 men.

Second-bottom Stoke had not won for nine league games and had not scored at home in their previous four but they produced a resilient performance after having Rory Delap sent off after 38 minutes for kicking at winger Shaun Wright-Phillips.

They scored the game's only goal in first-half injury time with an excellent James Beattie header from a Matthew Etherington cross.

Stoke spent almost the entire second half packed in their own half as City launched wave after wave of attacks.

However, despite the presence of the likes of Robinho and big-money new signings Craig Bellamy and Nigel De Jong, there was little creativity about their work and they were largely reduced to long-range shots, mostly high over the bar.

Earlier this month Mark Hughes's team were knocked out of the FA Cup at home by Championship (second division) Nottingham Forest and then suffered a series of off-field setbacks, including their failure to sign Kaka from AC Milan.
READ MORE - Man City woe after defeat to 10-man Stoke

Robinho denies assault allegations

London, Jan 28: Brazil and Manchester City football star Robinho denied any allegations of wrongdoing after British media said he had been arrested in connection with a sexual assault on a woman in northern England two weeks ago.

British media said the assault on the 18-year-old woman took place in a nightclub in Leeds.

A statement on the player's website said Robinho denied any allegations of wrongdoing or criminality and was happy to cooperate with police.

"We can confirm that Robinho met the police today, as pre-arranged and as part of a criminal investigation," Robinho's spokesman, Chris Nathaniel, said in the statement.

"He strenuously denies any allegation of wrongdoing or criminality and is happy to cooperate with the police if required further."

Asked about the incident, police in West Yorkshire said that a man had been arrested and released on bail, but declined to identify him.

Robinho, whose full name is Robson de Souza, joined Manchester City from Real Madrid in September.
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