A little perspective needed at Arsenal

Arsenal have started the season fairly well in the league but talk of a title challenge has reared its ugly head again and some perspective needs to be attached to how they’ve begun the new campaign, with expectations already been laughably raised to a ridiculous level.

Arsene Wenger’s side currently sit in eighth in the league table after six games having picked up nine points. They’ve not had the easiest of starts to the new season but they’ve picked up a point away at Stoke and Manchester City and all three at Liverpool, while destroying newly-promoted Southampton 6-1 on home turf, which appears to have been the result which has sparked all of the premature title contender talk.

Much like Joe Hart is proclaimed as being world-class simply because he’s better than David James and Paul Robinson and Paul Lambert has been eased in at Aston Villa after a tricky start as Alex McLeish’s predecessor, this Arsenal side appears to be benefiting in the main from the fact that they’ve started the season better than last year.

In their opening six games last season, Arsenal picked up seven points from their opening six league games, which is only two less than this season. The club’s fans are well-known from ranging between ‘the sky is falling down’ to ‘in Wenger we trust’ brigade and while every set of supporters has its extremes, Arsenal’s just appear to be more vocal than most.

The pressure was well and truly on last season after the side’s 8-2 humiliation away at Old Trafford against Manchester United, while they also lost 2-0 at the Emirates to Liverpool and inconceivably 4-3 to Blackburn. They scored nine goals while letting in an alarming 14 which compared to this season’s tally of 10 scored and four conceded is certainly a step in the right direction.

While the result at Old Trafford proved the nadir of last season, it’s worth remembering just how poor defensively the hosts were on that day too and Arsenal, with better finishing in front of goal, could have easily have finished the game with five or six goals to their name too. It was an absolutely crazy, somewhat bizarre match during which Wenger was forced to field a hugely inexperienced back four which struggled to cope with United’s pace and movement.

Of course, Newcastle and Manchester United away, Liverpool at home is far from the easiest of runs to begin your season with, but it was made even worse by the fact that both Cesc Fabregas and Samir Nasri both decided to leave the club late on in the transfer window. Wenger’s big mistake was simply not planning for either of them leaving, so he was left with a mad supermarket sweep trolley-dash on deadline day to pad out his squad and Jack Wilshere’s injury absence didn’t help matters either.

This summer he appears to have learned from that gross error of judgement which deeply effected the side’s shape, confidence and rhythm earlier on in the campaign by compensating for the inevitable loss of Robin van Persie with the acquisitions of both Lukas Podolski and Olivier Giroud, even if the latter hasn’t quite found his  scoring boots yet.

The result has seen them become a much more rounded side, no longer relying solely on van Persie to carry them through big games but there’s been a temptation to get carried away with their results so far, more out of surprise that they haven’t started the season as badly as last year and that they seem to be coping a lot better post-van Persie than they eve did Fabregas and Nasri.

We shouldn’t forget that Arsenal have still only won two league games so far this season, less than Fulham, West Brom and West Ham and the same as Swansea and Newcasle and their start simply hasn’t been as exceptional as first assumed.

While the performance away at champions Manchester City and the maturity of their display at Anfield against a Liverpool side in transition will have enjoyed greatly by the club’s supporters, they were still out-played for prolonged spells by rivals Chelsea at the weekend and they’ve failed to break down both Sunderland and Stoke on home soil.

Indeed, the nature of the club’s defence has been praised to such an extent that Steve Bould is now no longer just a former player with a sound knowledge of how to organise a back four, he’s the messiah. Keeping clean sheets against Sunderland and Stoke, two sides who showed little to no ambition to attack is nothing to write home about, while keeping another against a toothless Liverpool side is hardly surprising either.

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It’s become something of a concerted PR effort on behalf of the club to praise Bould of late. Do they look more organised this season than last? They sure do. Are they still defensively sound? The goals that they leaked against Chelsea show they most definitely are not. Just as the praise sent Bould’s way at the start of the season was hugely over the top, equally, he isn’t now rubbish at his job just after one poor defensive performance.

Arsenal still look far from the finished package; while Cazorla and Podolski have adjusted well and Oxlade-Chamberlain, Arteta and Meresacker have all impressed at times, they still look a way off the two Manchester clubs and Chelsea in terms of a title challenge this season. A top four place should still be their ambition and Wenger has shown in the past that he’s fantastic at achieving that level of consistency, but the fawning praise of what is still quite an inconsistent start, simply because it’s better than last year’s, lacks any sort of context and talk of a title tilt is still a long way away in the future.

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Shearer: North East Derby Defining Moment For Managers

Newcastle United legend Alan Shearer believes that last season’s Tyne/Wear derby was the pivotal moment in two managers’ careers, as he told the Sun.

Shearer felt that despite already being up against it, Steve Bruce’s fate was on the wall after their home defeat to arch rivals Newcastle last season, and todays clash could well end with the same fate.

“Last season Newcastle went to the Stadium of Light in the second match of the season,”

“Newcastle won 1-0 and the Sunderland fans never forgave Brucey.

“I genuinely believe he was already up against it at Sunderland purely because he was a Geordie.

“But after losing that derby he won only another two games up until his sacking in December.

“Conversely, the result provided a massive boost for Alan Pardew as Newcastle went on a 10-game unbeaten run laying the foundations for a fifth-placed finish in the league.

“That is what a result in this game can do for either club.

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“Let’s not forget this fixture also proved the final act for Ruud Gullit at Newcastle in 1999 when he decided to leave me on the bench until late on and we got beat 2-1 at home.”

Is two years too long to wait for this Manchester United icon?

No, you haven’t been absorbed into some Manchester United fan’s wet dream – the Premier League side really are considering re-signing Real Madrid star Cristiano Ronaldo.

Murmurings of the Portugese’s potential Old Trafford re-arrival first emerged following an interview earlier this month in which he proclaimed a great love for the city of Manchester and his former club, even declaring; “I wish I can come back some day.”

Music to the ears of every United supporter, and far from a nostalgic fantasy, Sky Sports correspondent Guillem Balague believes a move back to Carrington is a distinct possibility for Ronaldo.

The Spanish journalist boasts serious credentials with his resident spot in Revista de la Riga’s cafe-come-shed studio set-up, especially in regards to La Liga’s backroom politic. He alleged Chelsea’s £32million deal for Diego Costa was complete way back in January; he also revealed Barcelona’s sale of Alexis Sanchez with paralleled foresight.

Optimists hope an agreement for the Portugal international can be thrashed out by the January window, realists, by next summer . Unfortunately for both schools of thought however, Balague hypothesises that Ronaldo’s Bernabeu exit will unlikely come into fruition until summer 2016.

“Cristiano Ronaldo dreams and would like to go back to Manchester United. It’s just the timing which I think people are getting wrong. Real Madrid have got no intention whatsoever of selling Cristiano Ronaldo next summer,” Balague recently informed Scott Minto and co.

“In two years’ time I would say yes, that is possibly the time when he will be 31 going on 32, for Real Madrid to say: ‘OK, if we can cash in on him, brilliant. He has done a lot for us, but that’s it, time to move on. I don’t think it’s going to happen this summer. People will have to be a little bit more patient.”

Cristiano Ronaldo – a Ballon d’Or winner, a two-time Champions League winner, one of the two leading entities in world football – only trumped in public endorsement of his quality by one Lionel Messi. Surely a talent worth waiting years, generations, even decades for.

But in this case, with the forward approaching his 30s and the rate of change eternally relentless in the Premier League, is two years too long to hang around for Ronaldo’s signature?

The opinion of the United faithful will be a resounding no. After all, the Portugal international left Old Trafford a superstar, but four years at the Bernabeu has transformed him into a footballing god. Indeed, since joining Los Blancos in 2009, he’s bagged 265 goals in 255 appearances – nobody even bothers to mention the amount of assists he’s racked up, but for the record, it’s 47 in La Liga.

Even at the age of 32, as he will be by summer 2016, the United icon will possess the physique of players ten years his junior, and there’s no questioning Ronaldo’s devotion – everything earned in his career thus far has come through hard work on the training pitch as much as it has natural-born talent.

But there is an old adage in football that you should never go back. Ronaldo may currently boast the best goals-to-games ratio in La Liga history of 1.08 per match, but that potency will eventually fade away. There’s already signs of this being the case; the Portugal international’s strike-rate is still ridiculous, but since his record-breaking 60-goal haul during the 2011/12 campaign, his numbers slumped to 55 goals the following season and 51 last term. By the time he comes back to Old Trafford, he could have returned to a mere-mortal state of just twenty or thirty goals per season.

Injuries are undoubtedly taking their inevitable toll, further exacerbated by Ronaldo often refusing to spend spells on the sidelines, determined not to let Lionel Messi pull away from him in the goalscoring charts. Ronaldo’s most recent lay-off over the summer doesn’t seem to have affected him too much however – in fact, he’s bagged ten goals in just five La Liga outings this season.

Yet, nostalgia is a very dangerous thing.  United won’t be getting the Ronaldo that left the Premier League in 2009, or the Ronaldo that won last year’s Ballon d’Or. It will be the Ronaldo Real Madrid no longer feel they need so intrinsically, serving them better in the transfer market than on the pitch.

Class remains a permanence but the Premier League will only become faster, stronger and more intense in the next few years – is this really the right environment for an ageing star of world football to see out his twilight years? That privilege usually gets reserved for Serie A or the MLS.

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Of course, the situation could look incredibly different in two years’ time. After all, Manchester United may still be dwindling in the European wilderness at that point. Ronaldo could still be netting 50-odd times per season. Rooney may have undergone is second hair transplant. David Moyes could be back in the Old Trafford dugout. Okay, maybe not that last one.

But the point remains that amid their current malaise, United won’t find any solutions in their past. Just as Sir Alex Ferguson has proved irreplaceable, so is Ronaldo – even by the United icon himself.

Although in heart, United fans would be more than willing to wait two years for Ronaldo, in mind, they’ll know that in financial and footballing terms, it’s simply an unjustifiable scenario.

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It could be worse Nando, you could be one of these guys…

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Will Manchester City remain a threat next season?

You could almost sense the disappointment on the faces of everyone at Sky last weekend when Everton sprung a surprise by beating a deeply out-of-sorts Manchester City side 2-0 at Goodison Park. The title race was officially over. Not mathematically yet, but this was no longer a race, well none more so than one between myself and Usain Bolt would be. No, this was a coronation, with Manchester United the clear winners. It wasn’t supposed to be this easy. There are still nine games of the season left to play, which is an embarrassingly meek defence of their maiden Premier League crown, but what do they need to do to become more of a threat next season?

Firstly, let’s establish that City have improved immeasurably under Mancini’s reign and up until this season, they’ve improved year on year, winning the FA Cup first in 2011 before pipping rivals United to the title in the most dramatic of fashions last season. Nevertheless, post-mortems of where it has all gone wrong for the club this season haven’t been in short supply over the course of the past week or so, but in all reality, despite the Sky rhetoric, it’s been over long before that. What has been a noticeable trend, though, has been the glee with which some of them have been written; Mancini is obviously a man who can occasionally rub people up the wrong way, but the sight of him being portrayed as some sort of clueless clown, when you consider the mess he inherited from predecessor Mark Hughes, really is quite bizarre.

The immediate reaction with City now from most observers is that they’ll just throw money at the problem. They’ll buy a new squad. Or the very essence of one at least, while the newspapers have been flooded with reports about ‘huge summer clear-outs’, which in reality almost actually never happens, and just like player exchange deals, they appear to be confined solely to either the print media or the realms of Football Manager.

Bearing in mind the future of the manager is not guaranteed, given that there is an all likelihood set to be something of a managerial merry-go-round in the summer involving some exceptional coaching talent, it makes discussing likely transfer targets a futile gesture if ever there was one, but departures are easier to judge.

A revealing interview with City chief executive and former Barcelona transfer puppet-master Ferran Soriano in the Gazzetta dello Sport published Wednesday hinted that there may be a more radical approach to transfers on the horizon: “My way of football? One year you can win with luck, but in the long term you need planning and investments to reach the final of the Champions League.

“In 2003 we did a study at Barcelona. For each player landed in the first team from the ‘cantera’ there was an average cost of £2m. Nothing if you think the current costs. Even at a age of five years you should get the style of the club, then the rewards will come.

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“Our problem is to find players stronger then ours. It’s not easy. There are rumours associating them [Stevan Jovetic and Erik Lamela] to City, but I never comment on market rumours. In the last three years there have been losses of £200m, then of £100m and now there is a ‘red’ of £50m. But we also have just invested £150 million for the structures of the youth sector. It’s a fantastic project, focusing on financial sustainability.”

That last line is perhaps the most interesting, seeing as it implicitly acknowledges the need for the club to adjust and reign in their spending so as to comply with Financial Fair Play. As an initial compromise, clubs will be able to record maximum losses of €45 million (£39.5m) in total over the first three years (which includes right now). That can be subsidised by an owner but only if they invest the money permanently in return for shares, not by lending it as Roman Abramovich did when he first took control of Chelsea. If owners are unable to subsidise debts, the maximum loss is €5m (£4.4m). From 2014 to 2017, the overall permitted loss will fall to €30m (£26.3m) for each three-year block monitored by Uefa. After that, Uefa hope clubs will have learned financial balance and be genuinely breaking even, or that’s the idea at least.

The problem facing City at the moment, though, is that despite spending approximately £54m last summer padding out their squad in terms of numbers and depth, they still looks woefully short of options in key positions and don’t have a lot to show for their investment. Meanwhile, key members of the squad such as Vincent Kompany, Joe Hart, David Silva, Yaya Toure and Sergio Aguero simply haven’t performed as well this season as last, while only really Matija Nastasic has had any sort of lasting impact on the starting eleven of the new faces brought in, with the jury still firmly out on the top flight’s most handsome man, Javi Garcia.

While the ‘big summer clear out’ stories are often ridiculous, as many as 10 players could feasibly leave in the summer – Santa Cruz, Bridge, Maicon, Kolarov, Dzeko, Lescott, Nasri, Sinclair, Tevez and Kolo Toure – with Yaya Toure’s agent kicking up something of a stink by threatening that his client will leave at the end of the season over his disgust that contract negotiations have taken so long to get going.

That doesn’t leave a lot to work with and what you’re left with is a side short on quality and depth, hardly helped by Mancini’s seeming inability to rotate his squad at all, instead counting predominantly on a core cast of players to support them on multiple fronts. Sinclair has in essence just replaced Adam Johnson in all but name, even playing less, giving credence to the thought that Mancini sees his squad as a two-tiered hierarchy based on prestige and status. It’s certainly a difficult party to break into.

When it comes to challenging for the title next season, should they keep the main spine of their side, remarkably, they still look better prepared than any of their so-called rivals to truly give United a run for their money. In the end, it all comes down to what you define as a ‘title challenge’. City being second in the league ensures they have at some point challenged by virtue of being the closest to the eventual winners of the league, but a 15-point gap with nine games left to go doesn’t point to a very good challenge, more of a leisurely disagreement over how to split a hefty bar bill.

Considering they’ve spent an awful lot of money, the current City squad isn’t in fantastic shape, even if they possess, when everyone is fully fit at least, a side to be feared. The financial constraints on the horizon mean a concerted push like the one in the summer of 2010 or even 2011 just isn’t possible, and the restructuring needed will have to be levelled out over a couple of years. The good thing about being such a wealthy club is, though, that there aren’t many bigger fish in the proverbial pond to bully you around, so keeping hold of their best and brightest shouldn’t be a problem, but the road back to the summit looks a longer one than we could have ever imagined just a few short months ago.

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They’ve done it once before, akin to scaling Mount Everest by taking a helicopter all the way to the top bar the last ten feet, now a more scenic and altogether tougher route is required. A lot can change in just a few short months, as this campaign has taught us, but there looks to be a busy summer ahead for Mancini, Soriano and co for them to go into next term with any real hope of wrestling the title out of the clutches of old red nose.

They remain a threat, but a fragile one at that. They’re far from a club in crisis, but this year they’ve been made to appear just a little more mortal than seemed possible. Rediscovering that ruthless swagger and restoring the team’s confidence is the most economical path available at the moment, even if a spot of spring cleaning may also be in order, but whether the man tasked with carrying out both jobs is Mancini or not remains to be seen.

You can follow me on Twitter @JamesMcManus1

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Liverpool star linked with return to Russia

Liverpool defender Martin Skrtel is the subject of interest from Zenit Saint Petersburg, according to reports from the Daily Mail.

The Slovakian, who moved to the Premier League from the Russian giants in 2008, has lost his place in the Reds’ starting line-up of late, after a shaky display in the club’s FA Cup defeat to Oldham.

This has prompted speculation that he may be allowed to leave Anfield, alerting his former club.

It is believed that they are willing to offer £13m for his signature, with spending power no issue for the Gazprom-backed outfit.

They would also be free to conclude a deal immediately, despite the January transfer window having closed.

All Russian clubs have until February 24th to conclude their business, with the window open for longer in their country.

It is unclear as to whether Liverpool manager Brendan Rodgers will be willing to allow the centre-half to leave, with both he and Daniel Agger forming a solid partnership.

However, the Merseysiders may be tempted to cash in whilst his value is high, and allow Jamie Carragher and Sebastian Coates to compete for a starting berth.

Liverpool have also been heavily linked with moves for Swansea’s Ashley Williams and Modibo Diakite of Lazio.

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If either, or both, were to be signed, it’s likely that at least one of their current defenders would be required to move on.

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Has Moyes made the right call at Manchester United?

Should we be so surprised that David Moyes has chosen to move on the backroom staff associated with Alex Ferguson’s time at Manchester United? Are we quick to question why Carlo Ancelotti hasn’t chosen to continue on with Aitor Karanka? Well no. The Italian will have his own methods of coaching and the club clearly want him to take them in a different direction. That will come with Zinedine Zidane as his right-hand man.

The faith offered to Moyes should be more than enough to indicate that he has a free role to do as he pleases with the backroom staff. What Manchester United had prior to his appointment was geared towards getting the best out of Ferguson’s team; this is now very much a squad who will take on the instructions given out by the new manager, and for that the surrounding staff should be able to work hand-in-hand with the set objectives.

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It’s completely understandable why some may wish to question Moyes’ action in sweeping away the remnants of the previous regime. Continuity and familiarity, especially with a winning team, allows for further success. Ferguson kept things fresh but the core of experience and the mentality remained. Forcing a group of players to quickly change from one to the other can have detrimental effects on the pitch, but that is a gamble Moyes is going to have to face.

But questioning this decision by Moyes then goes on to indirectly question his credentials as a manager, almost as if to say he needs that safety net of the previous regime in case things don’t go to plan. Surely that wasn’t in the job offer that he has to keep hold of the old backroom staff because certain sections weren’t too comfortable with the idea of him coming in and succeeding Ferguson. Or maybe it’s not just Moyes. Maybe any new manager would have been questioned in such a way. Pep Guardiola? Jose Mourinho? It doesn’t make any sense; in a way suggesting that Moyes is only there for PR or image purposes while the backroom staff continue under the orders of the previous manager.

What can be said is that maybe Moyes should align himself with a former Premier League player who knows the club well and is hugely respected, much like Ancelotti has done with Zidane. There will be times when the pressure becomes overwhelming for Moyes – he can’t escape that. It won’t label Moyes a poor manager, as the weight of expectation can get the best of anyone taking on such an enormous job. But having someone who knows the club well alongside him will help to relieve some of that pressure. Alex Ferguson isn’t an option. If he is encouraged to stay away in good times, he should also allow Moyes to learn on his own in bad times.

The choice to remove the backroom staff isn’t alien to football and we shouldn’t treat it as such. Is it that we can’t quite come to terms with the fact that Ferguson has moved on, needing a reminder of his time to help ease the transition? After a nod to what is taking place at United, this should become a non-issue. United will win games and lose games over the course of Moyes’ tenure, and much of it won’t solely come down to whether the coaching staff are new recruits or older heads. Good coaches will get the best out of good players, and there isn’t any reason to believe Moyes would bring in staff who aren’t up to the job.

Has Moyes made the decision with the backroom staff?

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Join the debate below

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The Leeds United ‘transfer’ XI…ouch!

Since the inception of the Premier League, it’s been a rollercoaster ride for Leeds United fans. They’ve gone from being defending champions in the inaugural season to Champions League semi finalists in the David O’Leary era before ending up in the depths of League One. The Whites are on the path of recovery now, finding themselves competing in the Championship but there have been plenty of times to forget.

Unfortunately, there’s been some utter tosh pull on the famous white shirt at Elland Road. Financial hardships meant Leeds had to rely on whoever they could convince to play for the club, or by borrowing players off other clubs. This situation has ensured the Leeds fans have witnessed some truly atrocious individuals turning out for their football club, scenes that they hope will never be repeated. It’s almost impossible to sort through some of the rubbish that has played for Leeds, but we’ve compiled the worst XI signings ever to play for the Whites.

Click on Lee Sharpe to get the ball rolling

Hartlepool owners IOR must show desire of early reign

In 16 years of owning Hartlepool United, on-the-pitch matters have never been more important than this for owners IOR.

In the wake of Neale Cooper’s sad resignation last week, IOR, and especially chairman Ken Hodcroft, must act decisively and make the correct appointment to replace the likable Scot. By that it has be a manager who can shake the current crop of players up, rid the squad of the bad eggs and have no previous links with HUFC.

IOR have done wonders for the football club on a whole, than can never, ever, ever (I could repeat that lexis to my heart’s content) never be underestimated and forgotten. Without IOR, we would no longer be a Football League club. We would be where our neighbours Darlington are, as the familiar adage goes now.

IOR came in 1997 with an ambition: to resurrect a flailing football club and to get them moving. Mission complete. Even when the club returned to the basement tier in 2006, IOR were undeterred. In came in Danny Wilson, a shrewd appointment indeed. Wilson knows his football, he knows the lower-leagues, he knows how to set teams up, he knows good players and he can man-manage. IOR, one presumes, stretched their purse strings to bring Wilson in. They must do the same again if they are to prove they are still owning this football club not just for business purposes.

Why the discontent in my words? Because for five and a bit seasons HUFC have just rode the tide of League One. Twice they have arrested their slide towards the League One trapdoor on the last day of the season, and three times they have bobbled along mediocrity like a bhoy in the ocean: causing no damage whatsoever to the big boys of the league but remaining pesent and one to negotiate around. This time rounds it’s entirely different: Pools are rock bottom of the league, cut adrift of safety and in serious danger of sinking back into League Two. The sinking ship needs rescuing. Quickly.

For that to happen IOR have to respond quickly. They were right to describe their acceptance of Cooper’s resignation as “reluctant” for although he cannot be immune to criticism (three poor summer signings, odd subs and selections), there are far greater worries at the club. But, as always in football, it is the manager who pays for it and takes the flack.

The current squad is not good enough for League One football, that being shown by the fact they have forced three mangers out of the door in 24 months due to there ineptitude. There also seems to be a contingent of that club who are happy to plod along and from the outside looking in with an intriguing eye, there is no coaching system in place. It’s either route-one and back to the opposition with any pressure to regain possession or pass the ball along the defence with the intention of playing from the back. Except with a flat back line and passing the ball across your 18-yard box, the intention, seemingly, is to invite the opposition on to score; that is poor coaching. The team needs to be coached by an experienced coach. Micky Barron and (Sir) Ritchie Humphreys are great club servants, together amassing more than 900 games for the club but persisting with the duo as the club’s only coaches is not going to reap rewards. They need back up.

This really is a crucial time in IOR’s tenure at Victoria Park. Unless they act correctly in bringing in a manager who knows League One football, can operate on a small, restrictive budget, can enable the players to start grinding out wins, HUFC will not be playing third-tier football for a while long yet.

Instead of placing all their eggs in one basket on the ground sale (which is essential for the club to move forward), Hodcroft must spread his basket far wider than the stubborn council and invest in the team or else the consequences could be dire. Time to mirror the desire you showed so eloquently in the late 1990s and pre-2007, IOR.

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You can find me on Twitter @cmbell310 for Pool chat.

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West Ham v West Brom Team Line-Ups

West Ham entertain West Bromwich Albion at Upton Park in this afternoon’s early Premier League kick-off. Sam Allardyce has made two changes from his Hammers side that lost 3-1 to league leaders Arsenal on Boxing Day. Jussi Jaaskelainen returns between the sticks with understudy Adrian returning to the bench, and Razvan Rat comes in for James Collins, suggesting a reshuffle at the back.

Meanwhile, manager-less West Brom make six changes from the starting XI that claimed a draw against Tottenham on the 26th. Gareth McCauley, Billy Jones, Chris Brunt, Youssouf Mulumbu, Nicolas Anelka and Saido Berahino all return.

The TEN big Premier League transfers that failed to ‘pass the post’

A transfer window just wouldn’t be the same without some laborious saga that seemingly runs for months and months, causing nothing but endless frustration for supporters and the managers who desperately want to use the money to strengthen other areas of their playing staff.

The Luka Modric saga has finally taken over the Wesley Sneijder to Manchester United as the biggest one of recent times and I’m certain that Andre Villas-Boas is ruing how long it took his chairman to finally cash in on the Croatian, especially as the North Londoners were apparently only minutes away from securing a deal for Moutinho on deadline day.

Let’s be honest this failed deadline day move certainly isn’t the first and won’t be the last to fall through at the last knockings as clubs continue to fail to get their business done early, or a side’s brinkmanship ensures that their months of negotiation have simply been wasted.

This list is a celebration of such dramas and those transfer deals that never passed the post.

Click on Downing to unveil the top 10

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