Revealed: Man United fans would back Bas Dost deal to secure left-back signing

According to reports from The Independent, Jose Mourinho is unlikely to sign a new left-back this summer – despite it being the biggest problem position of his Manchester United tenure – to ensure he can afford to bring in back up for Romelu Lukaku.

With that in mind, Football FanCast recently outlined five potential solutions in the form cut-price striker signings that would add quality and depth to United’s forward line but also leave the Red Devils with enough in the bank to sign a top-class No.3.

And while there was no unanimous winner from our poll, which suggested Andy Carroll, Mario Balotelli, Salomon Rondon, Danny Welbeck and Bas Dost, it was the latter who came out on top with 41% of the vote.

The Dutchman is now effectively available on a free transfer, having terminated his contract with Sporting Lisbon after being attacked by fans at their training ground despite netting 34 times across all competitions last season.

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Which left-back would you like to see arrive at Old Trafford this summer, United fans? Let us know by commenting below…

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Arsenal fans split over Wilshere’s decision to leave following Emery talks

Unai Emery had many tasks to carry out when he became Arsenal manager, and one was the future of Jack Wilshere.

The midfielder has been part of the club fold for the past 17 years, but injury problems have hampered his progress.

After spending the 2016-17 season on loan at Bournemouth, Wilshere eventually forced his way back into contention at the Gunners, but he did not do enough to warrant a regular first-team spot.

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In an

/BkOCXr9B43r/?hl=en&taken-by=jackwilshere” rel=”nofollow” data-lasso->Instagram post on Tuesday night, the 26-year-old confirmed that he will be leaving Arsenal when his contract expires next month.

The England international, who missed out on a place in the squad for the World Cup in Russia, admitted that he felt he had “little choice” but to walk away.

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Wilshere revealed that discussions with new boss Emery ultimately led to his decision as he learned that he would not be getting regular first-team action this season.

Plenty of Arsenal fans were keen for the midfielder to stay put, but after the player’s confirmation, some are backing Emery, while others are angry at the coach.

West Bromwich Albion fans fuming as Barry signs contract extension

Gareth Barry had a strong reputation at Everton for his hardworking efforts on the pitch, but since moving to West Bromwich Albion, the midfielder’s status has dropped.

The former England international, who earned 53 caps for his country, moved to The Hawthorns last year.

During the 2017-18 season, Barry made 29 appearances in all competitions, and he recorded one goal and one assist in that time.

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His most memorable moment of the campaign is a negative one, though, as he was one of four players who stole a taxi from outside a fast-food restaurant after breaking curfew during a warm-weather training trip to Barcelona.

The group had called the cab to take them to get food before deciding to get behind the wheel while the driver was picking up their order.

How far will England get in Russia? Tell us now and win any World Cup shirt of your choice.

The quartet apologised for their actions in February, but some fans have not forgiven them.

On Monday, the Express & Star reported that Barry had triggered a one-year extension on his contract, and plenty of supporters were not best pleased.

Liverpool fans react to Jurgen Klopp’s transfer statement

The January transfer window is heating up and we’re all eager to see what the reigning champions of Europe have in store for their fans.Of course, Liverpool have already completed the transfer of Takumi Minamino from RB Salzburg and Jurgen Klopp has now revealed that any further business is unlikely for the Reds.Here’s what he said…

“We probably will not be too busy in the transfer window. We will see what happens but it’s unlikely.”

Watch Liverpool Videos With StreamFootball.tv Below

And it didn’t take long for the fans to react to their gaffer’s update as they all seemingly had a thought or two on Klopp’s verdict.

Many of them seem to think Liverpool should buy new defenders and plug a couple of holes in their lineup, namely target a possible understudy for Andrew Robertson or just boost the backline in general.

But some were totally fine with Liverpool not buying anyone as they trust their coach completely and feel happy with the squad they currently have at their disposal.

It seems that the German manager has instilled some real confidence into his fandom, whichÂshows in their reactions.

No clues: Can you name the season these iconic Liverpool images belong to?

Another fan, meanwhile, seems to think this is all a part of an elaborate plan to land a big-name signing like Kylian Mbappe…

Either way, the future is looking to be all but boring for the Reds as they continue to hone in on the Premier League crown.

Elsewhere, many Liverpool fans all wanted to sign the same player after he destroyed one of their bitter rivals…

The new Gary Neville? Why this is Man United’s signing of the summer

The summer of 2014 saw Manchester United bring in big attacking names, as newly appointed boss Louis van Gaal prepared to drag the Old Trafford side back into the Champions League. A year on, it is the positions further back in the side that the Dutchman has spent close to £80million on to fine tune his squad.

For a team so top-heavy last season, with big names failing to perform, the onus seems to have shifted to sorting out the back line. Though no big name centre back has walked through the door just yet, United seemed to have addressed another issue that has plagued the side for a number of years.

Since club icon Gary Neville retired, the Manchester side have struggled to adequately replace their former captain. Rafeal has recently left the club for pastures new, and despite a cult following picked up as a result of some heroic performances against Liverpool – never truly convinced in the role.

Antonio Valencia has been shifted back into the role, though his defensive qualities leave a lot to be desired. Basic mistakes as a makeshift defender pretty much summed the red side of Manchester up over the past few years.

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Perhaps the most understated of the new arrivals is Italian international full back Matteo Darmian. A £12.7m acquisition from Serie A side Torino, the athletic right back impressed on his competitive debut for the Red Devils, in their opening weekend victory over Tottenham Hotspur.

If his performance against Spurs is anything to go by, Darmian can address the right back issue. Singled out for his display by his manager, the former Palermo defender, along with Luke Shaw on the opposite flank, bucked the trend of a modern day full back – and made defending his priority.

Effective and efficient over flashy, the speedster expertly closed down Spurs’ attacks during the game, preventing the likes of Nacer Chadli, Christian Erkisen and Harry Kane from getting a sniff at the United goal.

Luke Shaw and Chris Smalling have significantly upped their games recently, and the addition of the Italian gives the Red Devils three quarters of top defence. Their new right-back perfectly slots into the system deployed by their Dutch boss.

Bigger names such as Nathaniel Clyne and Dani Alves were linked with filling the right-back berth for United, and the signing of the 25-year old perhaps came as somewhat of a surprise.

His dynamite defensive display was coupled with exciting attacking play. His new manager waxed lyrical about his new man ‘he played a good match in the Spurs half and when the opponents had the ball.’

With a respectable pass success rate of 86.1%, the 25-year old is clearly comfortable in possession, as van Gaal looks for his side to play out from the back. Three tackles and five clearances during his maiden 81 minutes in England show how solid he is when back in own half.

A powerful runner, the man who impressed against England during last summer’s World Cup clash in Brazil looks to be a great fit for his new side. A man of the match performance during his country’s 2-1 win over England on that muggy night in Manaus, coupled with another MOTM display during his debut in the Premier League is extremely promising.

While it is premature to mention the new man in the same breath as a stalwart like Gary Neville, the Italian’s early form is promising. Darmian can at least go some way in filling the void left since the former England international’s retirement over four years ago.

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Liverpool’s board must admit their mistake before they can hope to rectify it

It was the most surprising bit of unsurprising news of the season – Brendan Rodgers was sacked by club owner John W Henry’s Fenway Sports Group (FSG).

We are told that the result away to Everton had no bearing on his sacking, that Rodgers was out on his ear no matter what happened. FSG just didn’t want to rock the boat before such a huge game.

It seems Rodgers has paid the price for poor performances so far this season. After all the money he has spent, the board thought he should’ve done better with the start to the campaign.

Well, Rodgers and the mysterious ‘transfer committee’, presumably a hooded and robed-up group of club elders who convene in secret, under cover of darkness, to discuss the club’s transfer policy and OK deals. In this case, though, it was Brendan Rodgers who was sacrificed before the altar of form, an effort to appease the Gods of performances and set Liverpool free of the curse of under-performance.

Instead, the club will appoint someone else. Klopp? De Boer? Ancelotti? Big Sam Allardyce?

What you have to wonder is if any new manager can do any better than Rodgers just at the moment. If FSG are of the opinion that Rodgers should have done better with the squad available, then they must be of the opinion that whichever manager they do decide to bring in will do better with the squad they have available.

Yet, sacking a manager is usually admitting a mistake. It’s not to say that it was a mistake to appoint Rodgers, but it is to say that if you sack someone you must think you’ve made a mistake somewhere along the line. FSG may be admitting some sort of mistake here, but the next step to admitting the mistake is doing something to rectify it. Once you appoint a new manager, you have to back him with the cash to take the club in a new direction – a direction that doesn’t lead into yet another mistake.

So what can a new manager do to turn the tide? At least, what can they do differently? And the answer, for the moment, must be very little.

Brendan Rodgers tried everything – he came into the club trying to play a sophisticated passing game, moved on to the counter attack in order to utilise the pace of Sterling, Sturridge and Suarez, then tried to play with three defenders, starting attacks from deep using Emre Can as a centre back.

Rodgers has chopped and changed more than any other manager in the league. In fact, in buying versatile, team-oriented players like James Milner and Roberto Firmino to add to the likes of Emre Can and Adam Lallana, Rodgers seems to have actively planned to chop and change.

So a new manager can do very little in terms of changing tack, at least until January. And in January there’s another question – will the board back the new man to spend money?

Brendan Rodgers was given almost £300m to spend during his tenure at Liverpool, and although a lot of money was received from the sales of Luis Suarez and Raheem Sterling, that’s significant backing to give to a manager.

To sack him now is either to say he didn’t use it wisely – and then, surely the buck stops with the ‘transfer committee’ at least as much as it does with the manager – or it’s to say that he should get the team performing better than they have done given the resources used. It looks like the latter, and if it is, will FSG be reluctant to give the new manager more funds? Will they tell him his job isn’t to bring in new players and build a team in his image, but rather to mould this particular group into a team that can compete for Champions League football?

The decision to appoint a new manager is critical – you have to get it right. But in this case, I wonder if the bigger decision is the direction the American owners choose for the club. If they back a new manager with funds and admit their mistake in hiring Rodgers, or if they simply admit that Rodgers wasn’t the right man for the job at the right time.

If they don’t own up to a mistake in policy, a new manager is going to come into the club and find the same problems, and he’ll have to turn to the same old methods to fix it. This is a crucial time for the club, but I’m not convinced that the owners know what they’re doing.

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30 players who changed the face of the Premier League

The Premier League has had some stunning players over the years, but some are more important than others.

They’re not more important because they are better players, but simply because they changed something. They changed how a club was perceived, they changed the way the game is played in this country. In short, some of these players changed the course of history.

That’s a big and bold claim, but these guys are big and bold players.

This is a list of the signings that changed the Premier League. Before these men things were different. And they’re now different because of them.

This isn’t a list, there is no order. It’s just a collection of some of the greatest players this country has seen. So sit back, grab some snacks, and come with us on a journey down memory lane. This, you’ll enjoy!

Claude Makelele

Signing Makelele was a master stroke from Claudio Ranieri. He signed Makelele to work the team’s engine room, which left Zinedine Zidane frustrated that Real Madrid let him go. He remarked ‘why put another layer of gold paint on the Bentley when you’re losing the engine?’

It was Jose Mourinho who really let Makelele kick on, however. His use of the midfielder gave birth to the position still known today as the Makelele role, giving some idea of Makelele’s ability as a holding midfielder and also of the importance of having someone like him in the team in modern football.

Makelele and Mourinho together changed the face of English football, every team had to have a Makelele.

Robin Van Persie

Manchester City’s last-gasp winner over QPR in May 2012 wrested the title away from a Manchester United side who ended their game in Sunderland as Champions. The hurt was all too obvious on the face of Sir Alex Ferguson as the news of City’s winner filtered through and he set about winning the title back next season.

After a stunning season at Arsenal, Van Persie was also a target for City boss Roberto Mancini, but the Italian was left frustrated as Van Persie moved to United instead.

That was to be the signing that won the title back for United as Van Persie had another great season for the Red Devils, scoring a last minute deflected free-kick to beat City at the Etihad and then scoring the volley against Aston Villa that clinched the title in Sir Alex Ferguson’s final season.

Sergio Aguero

Announcing himself to the Premier League, Aguero scored two goals and set one up in a 30 minute impact extravaganza against Swansea at the Etihad. Once he took to the pitch you knew he’d be a star for City and so he proved.

That season, 2011/12 City won the league for the first time since 1969 and Aguero scored 23 Premier League goals, but the most crucial was the very last goal of the season to beat QPR 3-2 and ensure the title went to City, not United. I wonder what he’s up to these days….

Eric Cantona

The signing that announced Manchester United as a Premier League powerhouse. Leaving title-winning Leeds, Cantona joined cross-Pennine rivals Manchester United and helped them to the title instead.

With his collar up and his bad-boy persona – think kung fu kicking a spectator – Cantona was the sort of enigmatic genius that makes football worth watching.

Cantona added a glitz and a class to United and scored important and memorable goals along the way. He really was the King.

Thierry Henry

Thierry Henry came to Arsenal as a young player with a big future. Given his frightening pace, he started off as a winger, but as his ability to finish off moves grew, he moved into the centre.

Henry was famed for his speed and movement, but it was his finishing ability that will be most remembered. The familiar sight of Henry opening his body up to curl the ball around the keeper is ingrained into the minds of Arsenal fans and the minds of bossed opposition goalkeepers alike.

He helped Arsenal to an unbeaten season and there’s a statue of him outside the Emirates stadium, erected while he was still an active football player. That says it all, really.

Mesut Ozil

A sign that the Premier League is no longer all about power and pace, stamina and ‘getting stuck in’, Mesut Ozil came with a big price tag and an even bigger reputation.

He’s often criticised for strolling around the pitch, he has the best assists per game ratio in Premier League history.

His influence has ensured that the League has a World Class player, even if people refuse to see him for what he is because he doesn’t sweat enough for their liking. Ozil is part of a new type of player gracing the Premier League, and if Arsenal are to win the title this season, you can bet he’ll play a huge part.

Yohan Cabaye

Another signing that shows the changing face of the Premier League is fact that Crystal Palace have signed Yohan Cabaye. The Frenchman is a classy passer, but also Palace’s record signing.

The Premier League now has a burgeoning middle class who have the money to afford the nice things, luxury players such as Cabaye, but not enough for the Ferraris and Lamborghinis of this world.

Cabaye may not be able to fire Palace up the table in the long term, but so far he’s making an impact, finding himself right at the top of the list for tackles made.

He’s a quality player who’s not afraid to put in the work, so the fact that Palace have been able to get him speaks volumes for the League.

Yaya Toure

As the man who grabbed Manchester City by the scruff of the neck and hauled them kicking and screaming to the Premier League title, Yaya Toure deserves his place on this list.

The Ivorian didn’t feel the warm and fuzzy embrace of the love of Pep Guardiola at Barcelona, and so moved to City to join up with his brother Kolo.

There, he scored City’s goal in an FA Cup semi final against Manchester United, and the goal that won the final against Stoke. He scored vital goals in the title-winning season of 2012 – goals against Newcastle in the penultimate game spring to mind. He scored in the final of the League Cup when City were losing to Sunderland, and he scored vital goals again when City won the title in 2014.

If ever there was a vital player in a squad, it was Toure at City. His importance to the team cannot be overstated, and without him City wouldn’t be the force they now are in England. He truly changed the league

Petr Cech

Initially signed as a backup to Carlo Cudicini, Jose Mourinho quickly discovered just how good Cech was in 2004, and quickly established himself as Chelsea’s Number One.

In a glorious 10-year stay, Cech won everything worth winning in club football, and also some trophies not worth winning, becoming one of the World’s best goalkeepers in the process.

In his last year at Chelsea, Thibaut Courtois took over the mantle as Chelsea’s keeper, but a move to Arsenal could be the glorious end to a stellar career – the Czech Cech might just be the final piece of Arsene Wenger’s puzzle

Rio Ferdinand

Not only was Rio Ferdinand a British record transfer, signing for Manchester United in a £29m deal in 2002 – which is still a huge fee for a young defender, even though the money in football has grown exponentially since then – but he was one of the world’s top defenders for a decade.

Ferdinand formed a formidable partnership with Nemanja Vidic in a Manchester United back four that dominated English football and had great success on a European stage too – winning the Champions League in 2008, but losing in the 2009 and 2011 finals to Pep Guardiola’s Barcelona.

Vincent Kompany

Signed by Mark Hughes for a paltry £6m from Hamburg in 2008, Kompany is easily one of the best bargains ever picked up in the Premier League.

For all the huge signings around him at the club, captain Kompany came in at a fraction of the price, but with arguably more impact.

Initially put in the defensive midfield role, Kompany quickly established himself as a centre back and became a leader in the side, taking over the captaincy and lifting the Premier League twice – so far.

His headed winner against Manchester United right at the end of the 2011/12 campaign seemed to effectively win the title for City by taking them above United with only two games to go, but City, being City, made it harder for themselves.

Didier Drogba

One of Chelsea’s greatest ever players and certainly one of the Premier League’s best, too.

He is fourth in the list of Chelsea all-time top scorers, and also scored the last-minute goal that brought the 2012 Champions League final to extra time before coolly slotting home the penalty that won the cup.

More than just a handful up front, Drogba had technique, finishing ability and a penchant for a crashing volley from outside the box.

Cristiano Ronaldo

When he first came to the Premier League, Cristiano Ronaldo was a bit of a show pony. He lived to show off his skills and dribbling ability.

But after a few years of spending more time diving to the ground than actually scoring goals or creating chances, he changed his game and became all about the goals.

Ronaldo drove manchester United to winning the League and the Champions League as well as winning the Ballon d’Or as a Manchester United player.

When he left United, he left a gaping hole, but he commanded the world record transfer fee.

Peter Schmeichel

A goalkeeper who was probably worth about 12 points a season alone to Manchester United, but who did more than simply save their bacon from time to time.

He marshalled the back four, he shouted at and hassled his defenders and made them do what he needed them to do – defenders never wanted to make a mistake because they feared the wrath of Schmeichel.

Yet they knew that if they did make one, he’d likely bail them out. In short, he instilled confidence.

Schmeichel wasn’t just a great keeper who won almost everything there was to win, though. He was also a keeper who changed the face of goalkeeping in the 1990s and early 2000s.

Because of men like him and Oliver Kahn, keepers needed to have no fear of the gym. Hulking big goalkeepers who could claim crosses and look huge in the goal became the norm, even if that’s changing now to favour the sweeper-keeper.

Not that his size ever stopped him from getting down low to stop a shot, though.

Gareth Bale

Gareth Bale was very much a wonder kid at Southampton before he was bought by Tottenham Hotspur who fended off competition from numerous Premier League clubs.

Initially, he played as a left back, but moving onto the left wing, Bale grew in stature before scoring a hat trick in the San Siro, even though Spurs couldn’t prevent Inter Milan from beating them 4-3 in the Champions League group stages.

From then on, though, he carried Spurs almost single-handedly before joining Real Madrid for a huge fee which Spurs proceeded to waste on useless players.

Pedro Mendes

Threatened with relegation, Portsmouth appointed Harry Redknapp, who proceeded to bring in seasoned Premier League professionals in a bid to stave off the drop.

But it was Pedro Mendes who really turned on the style to drag Pompey to safety, including a pearler of a strike against Manchester City towards the end of the 2005/06 season.

Pompey stayed up and finished 9th the next season with the side managing to go from strength to strength.

Mendes was an important part of Portsmouth’s transformation under Redknapp from relegation-threatened side to FA Cup winners, but it was Mendes’s contribution that helped them stay in the division in the first place.

Ruud Van Nistelrooy

Manchester United’s top scorer in Europe, Van Nistelrooy also managed to score in 10 consecutive Premier League games. Twice.

He was deadly from inside the box, frequently fooling defenders with his movement, and besting goalkeepers with his finishing ability.

He formed a partnership with Wayne Rooney that terrorised England’s defences and won Manchester United every domestic trophy, including Sir Alex Ferguson’s final FA Cup.

After falling out with Ferguson, Van Nistelrooy was shipped out to Real Madrid, but only after scoring 150 goals in just over 200 games for United.

Xabi Alonso

Liverpool’s Spanish maestro was the heartbeat of the side.

A controversial statement when you remember he played alongside Steven Gerrard at the heart of the Liverpool midfield, but when Gerrard was busy breathlessly dragging his team forward – and he could be a bit of a headless chicken at times – Alonso was there, calmly spreading passes and controlling the game.

His freakishly frequent ability to score from inside his own half aside, Alonso was the master of long passes.

Perhaps his greatest legacy in England, though, is the fact that his position has been infuriatingly named the ‘quarterback role’.

Roy Keane

Signed in 1993, right at the start of Manchester United’s dominance of the Premier League during the 90s, Keane was Manchester United captain from 1997 until he left the club in 2005.

He was the fearless leader and formidable captain that epitomised the fighting spirit of the side and made sure that everyone gave 100% on the pitch.

His passion, work rate and energy made him the heartbeat of the United team which featured more talented, skillful players, but none gave more than he did.

This made him indispensable to a team that won everything, including a treble in 1999, even if he was a nasty piece of work sometimes…..

Edwin Van der Sar

An ultra-tall goalkeeper, Van der Sar was also very good with his feet.

He beat his former coach at Ajax, Louis van Gaal, to Manchester United, but the current United manager would certainly love to have Van der Sar playing now, or at least he would have done before David de Gea signed his new contract.

Van der Sar filled a gap left at United, the one left by Peter Schmeichel. The Dutch keeper made up the last line of the defence including Vidic, Ferdinand and Evra in a team that really should have won more than the one Champions League final it appeared in.

It was a team that allowed Sir Alex Ferguson a golden swansong, even if he retired before the legendary Scotsman did.

Wayne Rooney

Rooney’s signing for United caused a huge stir in the Premier League, and especially incensed Everton fans.

It also showed that it was acceptable to go out and spend heaps of money on young talent in the knowledge that they were going to be top players.

But the bigger picture is that Rooney has won countless trophies (well, eight major trophies, actually) and is now England’s top scorer and catching up with Sir Bobby Charlton as Manchester United’s all-time record scorer.

Whatever you want to say about him, if you go by the records, he’s one of the best that England has ever produced.

Dennis Bergkamp

The non-flying Dutchman was one of the best players ever to grace the Premier League.

He was part of the first wave of players brought in by Arsene Wenger who charmed English football with their beautiful play.

Bergkamp won three league titles and four FA Cups and even helped Arsenal to a Champions League final in 2006, even though he didn’t play.

Bergkamp may be overshadowed at Arsenal by Thierry Henry, but will always be remembered as a great.

Gianfranco Zola

In an era before Roman Abramovich, Gianfranco Zola came to Chelsea and fell in love with the club. And the fans fell in love with him too.

His skill and ability bewitched defenders and brought Chelsea trophies and helped bring them back into the Champions League before being taken over by Russian billions.

Without Zola and friends putting Chelsea on the map, perhaps Abramovich would have taken his money elsewhere.

These days he owns a gelato cafe in South London….

Alan Shearer

How could we not include the Premier League’s all-time top scorer. He isn’t just top scorer, he’s so far out on his own that he may never be caught.

When Newcastle bought Shearer from Blackburn Rovers in 1996, it ripped the heart out of Blackburn as well as their goals, but Newcastle could never hit the heights that Blackburn did for that single season in 1994/95.

Shearer is Newcastle’s top scorer, too, yet he never managed a winners’ medal with his boyhood club.

Paolo Di Canio

A cult hero if ever there was one, West Ham fans will remember Di Canio with fondness, not just because he was a wonderful player, but also because his passion and desire made him the perfect fit for West Ham.

The fans loved him, as did fans of other clubs, though, he was just so entertaining.

Di Canio is one of the few Italian players to have been a big success in the Premier League, even though he wasn’t a success as a manager.

His push on the referee showed his dark side, but then his display of sportsmanship, catching the ball instead of putting it into an empty net with the goalkeeper lying injured on the ground showed his good side. And then there was that goal against Wimbledon.

Di Canio’s passion showed that foreign players could become heroes at an English club – they weren’t all prima donnas who couldn’t handle the weather or the physical game and ‘didn’t like it up them’.

Ashley Cole

Nicknamed ‘Cashley’ for his move to Arsenal, Cole was vilified not just by Arsenal fans for moving to a rival London club, but by football fans in general for his distinct lack of loyalty.

Modern players, however, aren’t always driven by loyalty, but then neither are they always driven by money either. Cole’s later career shows why he did it: trophies.

After his absence, Arsenal didn’t win a trophy for years. At Chelsea, Cole won another Premier League title, four more FA Cups, a League Cup, a Europa League and a Champions League. He has won more FA Cups than anyone else.

Robinho

When the money started to flow into Manchester City in 2008, it came into City right on transfer deadline day.

With no time to waste, City got to work bidding for the world’s best players and finally landed Robinho.

The Brazilian started his City career alongside fellow Brazilians Jo and Elano and started to score goals, including one on his debut against Chelsea.

Although his work rate left a lot to be desired, and his City career floundered and eventually flickered out, Robinho showed City a glimpse of the good life for a while. And boy have they grabbed it since.

Patrick Vieira

Part of the invincibles squad at Arsenal, Vieira is the one player that Arsene Wenger hasn’t been able to replace at Arsenal.

Vieira was a powerful midfielder who fitted in nicely to England’s fast and physical game and became one of the best midfielders in the league, entertaining us with his marauding runs and his battles with Manchester United’s Roy Keane.

When he left, he left a gaping hole in Arsenal’s midfield, and it still hasn’t been filled.

Francis Coquelin provides a defensive solidity to the team, but Vieira also provided an attacking option. Even 10 years on, he’s still sorely missed.

Carlos Tevez

Probably the biggest signing in Manchester City history, bringing Carlos Tevez from cross-town rivals Manchester United not only showed City’s intent to become a truly big club, but it also created the symbol of taking something off United.

Not just one of their best attackers, but also their dominance of Manchester.

In the end, Tevez’s antics on a bench on a Munich touchline dampened his effectiveness for City, Tevez really helped City win the title that season, scoring goals upon his return from spending most of the season in exile in Argentina.

When he moved on, City were a much stronger side than they were when he arrived, and his presence not only showed City were able to compete with the traditionally big clubs, but they had the players to prove it.

Luis Suarez

Forget about the biting and the alleged racism – if you can – and just sit back and watch an astounding player astound the country with his ability.

Suarez had it all, not only did he have skill, pace, finishing ability and vision, he was also a very hard worker.

The fact he was so dangerous worried defenders anyway, but if they had the ball and he was closing them down, they knew he wouldn’t give up.

He brought Liverpool to within a stud’s length of winning the Premier League in 2014 as the grip in Steven Gerrard’s feet gave out, and so did his grip on the Premier League trophy.

The hilarious (but also sad) decline of a Liverpool & England hero

It is not an exaggeration to say that Michael Owen was my childhood hero.

Perhaps this was because I was the sort of football fan growing up who watched my idols on TV rather than in the stands. If I was a full-blown Kopite, I might have preferred Robbie Fowler or Steve McManaman, but I wasn’t, I was just a boy sitting in front of a TV, mesmerised by one player and his phenomenal individual talent.

In many ways, supporters like myself stole Owen from Liverpool fans. I was part of a legion of fan-boys who adopted Owen, without the slightest consideration towards the club he played for. Owen was always appreciated by Liverpool, although he never reached the ‘God’ like status of Fowler. Unlike Fowler, Owen’s most iconic moments were in an England shirt, he was known first and foremost as an England international rather than a Liverpool striker.

After David Beckham, Owen was English football’s biggest commodity. He was a wind up monkey, a victim of his own incredible dullness and controlled by the brands that owned him. His premature genius was set free in the 1998 World Cup, he was just 18-years-old.

His rise to super stardom was something out of a video game, Owen was the FIFA avatar we have all imagined ourselves to be, although he was playing out the fantasy in real life, he was a professional footballer when the rest of us were studying for our A Levels or GCSE’s.

Sadly Owen wasn’t built to last, at 19 he ruptured his hamstring and his career would never be the same. He was still a great player, but Owen wasn’t just meant to be a great player, he was going to be the best player in the world.

Since retiring from football, Owen has become a different version of himself; maybe he has become his real self? He was a role model for the next generation of footballers; now he’s nothing more than a washed-up pro, who was once taken seriously.

Occasionally Owen will remind us of his success on the field, he will tell us that he scored for Real Madrid in El Classico, or that he won the Ballon D’Or (otherwise known as the European Player of the year, in his day). But most depressing of all is the fact that Owen needs to convince people that he was a great player.

His career decline began at Newcastle United, and since then he has become more and more insignificant. Now that he has retired, Owen is fighting to stay relevant; he has accidentally become everyone’s favourite footballing comic and his Twitter page reads something like a parody account. He’s no longer one of England’s greatest goal scorers; he’s just a bloke who’s only watched eight films in his entire life.

Like many people, I have laughed along with Owen’s befuddlements over the past few years, the man is truly hilarious, and his oblivion to it all makes it so much funnier. He is still the wind up monkey he once was, although he doesn’t work quite as well as he used to.

Occasionally Owen will forget that he’s a footballing superstar, and revert back to his true self, which is an incredibly dull man who says things like, “Christmas is underrated. Best day of the year by far.” It’s as though he’s commentating on his own life from the BT Sport commentary box.

Every Saturday lunchtime Owen unites a nation, as the keyboard warriors of English football take to Twitter to express their abhorrence to Owen’s commentary. He’s often accused for stating the obvious without a detection of irony in his voice, therefore leading people to believe that he’s genuinely stupid. For example, in commentary Owen once said, “You need people who score goals, that’s how you win games.” Yes Michael this is true, I literally cannot argue with that. In fact to paraphrase Owen once more, it’s as simple as…simple.

Owen is like an old man who we respect on the inside, but poke fun at because he’s defenceless. Maybe we degrade him because of his achievements, or maybe it’s because of his fixation with horses? Either way, no matter how much Owen embarrasses himself, it should never be forgotten just how good Owen was as a footballer.

England may never again produce a talent as raw as Michael Owen; he is a national treasure, a future knighthood recipient and one incredibly funny man. He’s not having a career decline; Owen is having a renaissance and he’ll always have his former glories to fall back on.

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Arsene Wenger lauds Arsenal summer signing

Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger has stated that Petr Cech is one of his best-ever signings and that the goalkeeper has added real quality to the North London team.

The Czech Republic international was a legend at London rivals Chelsea, but lost his starting berth to Thibaut Courtois last season.

Desperate for first-team football, Cech crossed the city to join the Gunners and has commanded the number one shirt this season.

The Gunners have had issues between the sticks in recent years, but the experienced stopper has added an assurance as the last line of defence.

Ahead of Arsenal’s mouth-watering clash with Manchester City on Monday night, Wenger has been signing the praises of his goalkeeper and admits that he wished he had signed the custodian ahead of Chelsea in 2004.

“There was no work permit issue or anything because he went to Chelsea from Rennes and we could have been quicker maybe on the day than Chelsea, especially because I know his agent very well,” Wenger told The Telegraph.

“He was a goalkeeper as well, Frederic Dobraje, and we were maybe not sharp and quick enough.

“I think Cech has brought his experience and his calm and his leadership as well. He has done it all, so he is someone who gives you an aura, a charisma that is always ­important in the big games for the ­players.

“You always look around you in the dressing room before a big game and you think, ‘Are we strong enough?’ And these kind of faces help you to ­believe it.

“There is no history of teams winning things without having a great goalkeeper. I’m now 30 years in the job and you learn that the goalkeeper is the most underrated position in football – and maybe the most vital one for winning things.”

Cech’s arrival has seen Wojciech Szczesny sent out on loan to Roma, while David Ospina has been demoted to the back-up position.

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Arsenal striker still backing title challenge despite slip to fourth

Arsenal star Olivier Giroud believes the club are still in the running for the title despite their 0-0 draw against Southampton on Tuesday, according to reports from Arsenal’s official website.

The Gunners were on the front foot for much of the fixture but were unable to break down the Saints’ stubborn defence, with Southampton goalkeeper Fraser Forster in terrific form to keep the game at a stalemate.

The result now sees Arsene Wenger’s men in fourth place five points behind league leaders Leicester City, who beat Liverpool 2-0 at the King Power Stadium.

And Giroud was one of the attackers frustrated by the goalless draw, urging the squad to turn things around starting with Bournemouth this weekend to have any chance of claiming their first league title since 2004.

“It’s a long way to go and we just need momentum,” he said. “Hopefully we can start that against Bournemouth and then after we have a big February and March until the international break.

“We’re going to see how it’s going to be but we need to keep our heads up and keep working on what we are doing well.

“Hopefully we are going to have better nights to come, because tonight we were a bit unlucky and a bit sad to draw.

“We had so many chances to score and we didn’t do it. We missed chances here and it could have been maybe 4-1 or 5-2 but their ‘keeper did well and it is hard.

“You have to keep the faith and keep believing that you will maybe score. That is what we tried to do but he [Fraser Forster] had a very good day. He was always in the right position and did very well and it is frustrating.

“Now we are five points from Leicester City so it is going to be a hard time in the few weeks to go and we need to get as many points as we can.

“It’s not over – we need to stay positive and be more efficient in the next games to come.”

Arsenal will want to push ahead in the race for the title with one eye also on the Champions League round-of-sixteen fixture, in which they face European champions Barcelona in the first leg on February 24.

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