The Beautiful Game

Imagine Cristiano Ronaldo playing for Brighton & Hove Albion. He'd just get in the way. 
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Michael Owen: Has Fergie lost his marbles?


Manchester United are on the verge of signing Michael Owen on a free transfer from  Newcastle United.



Just weeks after announcing that they would only sign young talent, Sir Alex seems set to take a gamble on Owen. Has he lost his marbles?

Yes this is the player who has a record of 40 goals from 89 England caps - but he is also the player who was dropped last season by manager Alan Shearer (and even by caretaker boss Chris Hughton) when his team were desperate for goals. He has only managed about 30 odd appearances a season across the last two years and was even rumoured to be looking at retirement.

His career seemed to be set for  bit of a nose-dive, his advisors sent out a glossy brochure of his talents and marketing appeal but only a potential offer of a 'dream' move  to Hull City or Stoke materialised - hardly what Michael is used to from his days with Liverpool and Madrid.

Yet out of nowhere come the reports that he is to undergo a medical at Manchester United. Now Fergie is obviously confident in Owen's mentality and believes that if he can get the boy fit then he will guarantee goals. But it is very unlike Ferguson to sign injury prone players. Only once before has he taken such a gamble with the signing of Owen Hargreaves......who is currently out for 24 months undergoing a leg replacement operation.

It seems like a huge risk, and is one that not even Blackburn Rovers are willing to take.

However, I can see the logic. When you look at what Ferguson has lost from Ronaldo - Pace, width and goals - he needs to reshape his squad. Ideally he wanted Ribery and Benzema but it seems that no French players are allowed to sign for anybody other than Real Madrid since Zidane was appointed chief scout. That has meant that Fergie needs to get creative in the market.

The recent signing of Valencia will provide the pace and the width on the right flank, but the Equadorian is unlikely to reach double figures on the scoresheet. The massive hole for United to try and fill comes from the goals Ronaldo brought to the team. Okay, Wayne Rooney is an unbelievable talent but he is not a goalscorer. Not of the type that United's success has been built on. He is not a Cole, Yorke, Van Nistelrooy or Ronaldo. United need goals, and Ferguson obviously sees Owen as the answer.

If Owen stays fit for the season he will easily score goals at United. He will have two great incentives, one will be the obvious clause related contract he will be on, and the other will be the FIFA World Cup. If he plays well for United, scores goals and builds an effective partnership with Rooney then Capello will not ignore him, and maybe he can repeat his epic performance from 1998.

Only time will tell if Fergie has lost his marbles, but I have a feeling he likes the odds of this bet..

 

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Filed under  //   Benzema   Blackburn Rovers   England   Fabio Capello   FIFA World Cup   Football   Manchester United   Michael Owen   Newcastle United   Premier League   Ribery   Rooney   Sir Alex Ferguson   Soccer   Transfers  

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Resting Players? Good, bad or ugly..


Each season, more and more players are involved in more and more fixtures. There has been a big debate around Theo Walcott and his involvement in the seniors prior to the UEFA U-21 European Championships , and that he will end up without any rest before getting stuck back in to pre-season training.

However, that has now gone away (although bound to resurface if he gets any injuries next season), and the fact that Gerrard plays 65 games in a season does not surprise anyone anymore. It is always going to happen as the game continues to grow and be the global power that it is. What is interesting to me in these days of huge squads (and teams with a number of star players) is whether resting players actually helps the team.



You hope by resting players they will be fresh, focused and up for it when the big matches come along. There is a crucial game for England's U-21 team on Friday where hopefully this will be the case.

It is the semi-finals of the UEFA U-21 European Championships and England go into their match against Sweden having rested players fully (England rested 10 players in their last Group Match). Now Stuart Pearce believes this will give his team an edge as he has a rested squad to pick from. Their opponents are co-hosts Sweden, and they had to play a  tough and intense last Group Match to get to this stage. If they lost they were out. They had to win to qualify, and win they did. Sweden now have momentum, England do not.

I wonder if Sir Alex Ferguson looks back on the end of last season's campaign with regret at resting his stars against Hull in the last game of the Barclays Premier League season. In the UEFA Champions League Final his side looked leggy and tired, and struggled to chase down and win the ball back from FC Barcelona. Perhaps United would of been better to of play the Hull game with the same intensity to carry into the final against FC Barcelona. We will never know.

Maybe Managers should be avoiding rotation and resting players as it interrupts the rhythm of the team and could even cause players to lose their focus. Look at Liverpool - last season was Benetiz's first where he played regular line ups and formation, and were it not for the injury to Torres I believe they would of ended up walking off with the title in May.

I think over the course of a season it makes sense to rest players when they are tired, but in big tournaments and just before big matches I would always rather my team approached the game with the same mentality and the same line up to maintain that momentum and energy into the final matches.

I just hope that Stuart Pearce does not look back and rue the decision to rest his players after they had already qualified. We will find out on Friday.

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Filed under  //   David Beckham   England   FC Barcelona   Football   Gerrard   Hull   Manchester United   Semi-Finals   Sir Alex Ferguson   Stuart Pearce   Sweden   Theo Walcott   UEFA  

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