Thursday 25 July 2013

SPORTS GIST

Arsenal bid £40,000,001 for Luis Suarez but Liverpool hold firm

Liverpool have rejected Arsenal's improved offer of just over £40m for Uruguayan striker Luis Suarez.
The unusual bid, was designed to trigger a clause in the player's contract, where the club are duty bound to consider any offer for him in excess of £40m and then inform the 26-year-old of it, but they do not have to sell.

FC Barcelona names Gerardo Martino as new manager

Barcelona have appointed Argentine Gerardo Martino as their new coach after he agreed a two-year contract.
The 50-year-old former Paraguay boss replaces Tito Vilanova, who stepped down as Barcelona manager to continue his treatment for cancer.
He was recently in charge of Newell's Old Boys, who he led to the Argentine Torneo final title last season.
It will be Martino's first job outside of South America since a six-month spell playing for Tenerife in 1991.

Jose Mourinho pleased with Chelsea's early transfer dealings


Chelsea manager Jose Mourinho believes he has stolen a march on some of his rivals by conducting his transfer business early in the window.
Chelsea have already recruited Andre Schurrle, Marco van Ginkel and Mark Schwarzer this summer.
Mourinho has stated that the only other player the club are interested in signing is Manchester United's unsettled striker Wayne Rooney.
And with no players expected to leave Stamford Bridge, the Blues boss feels he now has time to fully prepare his squad for the new season, which starts on 17 August.
"The sooner you have the players, the better," said Mourinho. "You know the squad you have, you know what you have to work with, you have time for that.
"Many clubs are waiting to the last moment to make their decisions. The problem is that those decisions affect not just one or two clubs, but a lot of them.
The one who sells has to go and buy, then they have to buy to replace, so no club is safe.
"Until the last minute somebody can go there and steal a player. I don't mean steal a player, but steal the balance that a manager has when he's working with a team.
"In that aspect, we are lucky because we don't have players to sell, so none of my players is leaving under any circumstances.
"That's good for me, but many teams will be until the last moment under pressure, without knowing how the squad is going to be."
Mourinho has also laughed off suggestions that he is playing mind games with Manchester United counterpart David Moyes.
The Portuguese recently praised Moyes, who left Everton during the off-season to succeed Sir Alex Ferguson at Old Trafford.
When it was put to Mourinho on his arrival in Jakarta, where Chelsea play an All-Star XI on Thursday, that his compliments towards Moyes were a calculated act, the Blues manager replied: "If to say that my colleague in Man United is a great coach, he deserves success, he deserves time to work, he didn't win trophies at Everton because it's difficult to win trophies there... If to speak good about him is to play mind games, what do you say if I speak bad about him?
"The best thing is not to speak, and if I don't speak nobody says nothing."

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