Jose Mourinho: Chelsea will always be in my heart

Chelsea remain in my heart, says Mourinho as Abramovich closes in on deal to bring back Special One

By
Richard Sharpe

PUBLISHED:

14:04 GMT, 26 March 2013

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UPDATED:

14:09 GMT, 26 March 2013

Jose Mourinho has fuelled speculation he will return to Chelsea next season, saying the club remains in his heart and he has 'big emotional connections' with Stamford Bridge.

It comes amid rumours that a deal to bring the Portuguese back to the London club is as good as complete following discussions with owner Roman Abramovich.

Tellingly, the Real Madrid manager played down persistent rumours he will join Manchester United, calling it 'Sir Alex's Kingdom' and willing Ferguson to continue in the job for many years to come.

Return: Jose Mourinho has said Chelsea remains 'in his heart' as speculation of a second spell at Stamford Bridge grows

Return: Jose Mourinho has said Chelsea remains 'in his heart' as speculation of a second spell at Stamford Bridge grows

In an interview with Sky Sports News recorded in London, Mourinho said: 'I can't deny in spite of this disgraceful weather I love it here and I have a house.

'I have big emotional connections with Chelsea, and one day I think naturally I have to be back to English football to Chelsea or another club.

'Chelsea means for me different than other clubs. It's in my heart as Inter is for example. One day I have to be back.'

Mourinho had been due to return to Stamford Bridge last night, as Brazil played Russia in a friendly match.

Despite being on the guest list of the Brazilian FA, there were no sightings of the 50-year-old in the stands.

However, it is now widely reported that a deal to replace Rafa Benitez at his former club is close to being agreed.

Good times: Mourinho with his Chelsea team after winning the Premier League title in 2005

Good times: Mourinho with his Chelsea team after winning the Premier League title in 2005

Reunion: Mourinho is believed to be close to agreeing a deal with Chelsea owner Roman Abramovich

Reunion: Mourinho is believed to be close to agreeing a deal with Chelsea owner Roman Abramovich

In the long-term though, many believe he will succeed Ferguson at Old Trafford when he eventually retires.

On the subject, Mourinho said: 'I was in Manchester three weeks ago with much nicer weather.

'I had a lot of fun with Sir Alex, texting him on the day of the match – I said, 'what is this fantastic sunny weather in Manchester' It was really good.

'I think Manchester is Sir Alex's Kingdom and I would love that job to be forever, of course it can't but I would love it for many more years.

'In the other chair is Roberto Mancini, with a contract, he was champion last year so I don't think there is a move over there.

Kingdom: Mourinho said he wished his friend Sir Alex Ferguson could carry on forever at Manchester United

Kingdom: Mourinho said he wished his friend Sir Alex Ferguson could carry on forever at Manchester United

'I hope everything goes well for everybody, even Benitez. I hope everybody finishes the season well. I wish for them the same I wish for myself to finish the season well.'

Mourinho added he still has unfinished business with Real between now and the end of the season.

'At the end of the day, I am in Madrid and I am very committed to the rest of the season.

'We are in the last eight of the Champions League and we have a [Copa del Rey] final to play with Atletico.

'I am professional and at the moment I only think about my job in Madrid.'

Arsene Wenger will seeks talks with Roy Hodgson over Jack Wilshere"s use in England"s end-of-season friendlies

EXCLUSIVE: Wenger's friendly fire! Arsenal boss wants showdown talks with England manager Hodgson over Wilshere's use

By
Sami Mokbel

PUBLISHED:

23:00 GMT, 20 March 2013

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UPDATED:

02:00 GMT, 21 March 2013

Arsene Wenger will seek talks with England manager Roy Hodgson over his use of Jack Wilshere during the end-of-season internationals.

England face the Republic of Ireland on May 29 – 10 days after Arsenal’s final game of the season against Newcastle – before travelling to Rio de Janeiro to face Brazil on June 6.

Both games are friendlies and Arsenal manager Wenger is keen to liaise with Hodgson and the FA to establish a clear plan of how his midfielder should be utilised.

Sidelined: Jack Wilshere hasn't played since suffering an ankle knock in the north London derby

Sidelined: Jack Wilshere hasn't played since suffering an ankle knock in the north London derby

Engine: Wilshere is already a key man for England despite playing for the national side just seven times

Engine: Wilshere is already a key man for England despite playing for the national side just seven times

Wenger was disappointed Wilshere played the full 90 minutes of the 2-1 friendly win over Brazil in February and, understandably, wants to avoid a similar scenario during the summer internationals.

Despite 17 months out with foot and ankle problems, Wilshere has been Arsenal’s best performer this season but Wenger wants Hodgson to go easy during the end-of-season international period, given Wilshere will have featured in what is likely to be an intense race for a top-four spot.

Wenger also wants Wilshere to have maximum rest ahead of next season, which looks set to be one of the most important in the Frenchman’s long tenure at Arsenal.

Wilshere is already showing signs of this season catching up with him. He is currently on the sidelines with an ankle injury picked up in the 2-1 defeat by Tottenham on March 3.

Wenger sent him on a mid-season break to Dubai to aid his recovery from the injury but the trip was also designed to recharge his batteries after a tiring 28-game season. Arsenal hope Wilshere will be able to return to first-team action for the visit of Reading on March 30 but it is more likely the 21-year-old will make his return against West Bromwich Albion on April 6 or Norwich seven days later.

Wenger faces more problems after Wojciech Szczesny’s father accused the manager of making his son a scapegoat and claimed Arsenal ‘played’ with the keeper’s fitness last season.

Szczesny, 22, was dropped for Arsenal’s
Champions League match against Bayern Munich last week after Wenger said
he had been mentally affected by his form, casting doubt over his
future.

Talks: Arsene Wenger will seek clarification from Roy Hodgson on Wilshere's role in friendlies

Talks: Arsene Wenger will seek clarification from Roy Hodgson on Wilshere's role in friendlies

Benched: Wojciech Szczesny's (right) dad Maciej criticised the Arsenal boss

Benched: Wojciech Szczesny's (right) dad Maciej criticised the Arsenal boss

His father, Maciej, who also played for Poland, told Polish newspaper Przeglad Sportowy: ‘Wenger already started to look for the scapegoat. It is not the way the boss should behave. Wojciech has had two serious injuries. He played with one in April and May (last year). He shouldn’t have agreed to play that time, but the coach insisted.

‘Wenger was playing with the young man’s good health and Wojciech agreed foolishly.

‘In my opinion Mr Wenger messed up a lot in April and May.

‘Then in August there was a foot (ankle) injury, after which he played almost instantly. After seven weeks out Wojciech trained for just seven days and played. How on earth can he be on his highest form’

Szczesny Snr added: ‘This last period has not been successful, however, I think my son can be the No 1 goalkeeper over 10 years. He just needs to come back to form.’

VIDEO: Interview with Arsenal and England star Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain

Forest Green Rovers: Welcome to the greenest football club on the planet!

Welcome to the greenest club on the planet! (No red meat, an organic pitch and Mowbot the lawnmower is solar powered…)

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UPDATED:

22:45 GMT, 7 December 2012

The clue is in the football club’s name: Forest Green Rovers. Or else it is in the address: The New Lawn, Another Way, Nailsworth. Welcome to the home of Forest Green, third in the Blue Square Bet Premier and the greenest football club on the planet.

From the solar panels on the roof of the main stand, to the meat-free menu and the electric car driven by owner Dale Vince, the credentials are there for all to see.

With a solar-powered lawnmower that sends text messages to the groundsman when it is broken and an organic pitch to boot, Vince is using football to spread his message. And why not

Flying the green flag: Dale Vince, the club's owner, is building football's most eco-friendly club

Flying the green flag: Dale Vince, the club's owner, is building football's most eco-friendly club

The 51-year-old was laughed at when he decided to sell green energy. After building 53 windmills, the first of which overlooked the club’s stadium, he now employs 300 people in Ecotricity, a business that turns over 50million.

And, after winning over a sceptical audience, Vince is clearly on to something. But why Forest Green, a club based four miles south of Stroud, Gloucestershire

‘It’s a combination of three things,’ said the club’s owner, ‘First, Forest Green had a need. They were teetering on the brink of bankruptcy. Second, it was local, they employed around 100 people and we were able as a company to find the sums of money they said they needed which, as it turned out, were gross under-estimates.

‘And third, it was the chance to promote our message.

No burgers: But there's solar panelling at the ground

No burgers: But there's solar panelling at the ground

‘We look at energy, transport and food as the big three. We began with the windmills. Now we have constructed an electric car with charging posts on motorways. We call it the electric highway to encourage people to use electric cars.

‘The third is food. Red meat was the first thing we banned. Well, we didn’t actually ban it, but everyone has labelled it like that, so I’ve just fallen into using that term.

‘We just stopped supplying it to our players. I suggested that red meat wasn’t actually good for our players, our athletes.

‘The manager, Dave Hockaday, agreed to do it. During the course of the conversation, we said, “Well, if we are not feeding it to our players, then we shouldn’t really feed it to our staff or our supporters”. So we took it off the menu altogether.’

Vince added: ‘We took some flak for it but red meat is bad for us. It’s also unsustainable. And it takes 10 grammes of vegetable protein to produce a gramme of beef. You have diminishing returns. The rough analysis is that you can feed 10 vegetarians or one meat-eater.

‘It seemed wrong to me to be involved in the meat trade. I held it to be a bad product. And anyway, the burgers we sold at the time were s***e — or so I was told as I’m a vegan…

‘A few unreasonable people said I was a dictator, saying I was imposing my principles on them. But, if you flip it around and I was forced to sell them red meat, something I abhor as a practice, then they are imposing their principles on me.

‘I said to our fans, those who were upset, “Bring in a ham sandwich if you want, it’s only two hours every other week when you won’t have access to it on our menu”.

‘Most restaurants set their own menu. Italian restaurants serve Italian food. But they set the menu. That’s all we have done, set our own menu. Now we have offerings such as the Badger pastie — it’s a vegan pastie, braised tofu is the main ingredient. It’s got a meat-like texture, quite salty and it’s our halo product. It’s hand-made here on the morning of the game.

Green, green grass of home: Vince and the Mowbot, the lawnmower that sends a text to the groundsman

Green, green grass of home: Vince and the Mowbot, the lawnmower that sends a text to the groundsman

‘The players have been good. We have a nutritionist and he has been able to explain to them. We have moved things considerably. We feed them before and after games. Quorn is the principal source of protein we give them.

‘I’ve had fans come up to me and say it has changed their lives. One said she had lost a stone in weight.’

Vince spent a decade living as a New Age traveller. ‘I fought the law from time to time,’ he says. But then he hit upon wind energy and, due to the deregulation of the industry in the mid-Nineties, spotted a way to make it pay. And now he wants to spread the word.

‘We are already the greenest club on the planet,’ he said. ‘We have an organic pitch — no fertilisers and pesticides. It creates an enormous challenge for our groundsman because you have to control weeds and pests and still promote growth.

‘We have a solar-powered lawnmower. We call it the Mowbot. It’s GPS-controlled and if it breaks down it sends our groundsman a text.

He's Red Nev, but Gary's green too

Gary Neville: Manchester United legend, dressing-room lieutenant, respected pundit…and eco-warrior.

But,
according to Vince, the two-time Champions League winner is so serious
about the subject he has even set up a charity called ‘Sustainability
in Sport’ with the owner of Ecotricity. ‘I read in the paper that he was
planning to build a house with an emphasis on the environment,’ said
Vince.

'I asked someone to send him an email asking whether there was anything we could help with — and we hooked up.

Dream: Neville's eco-house

‘He’s tried to build windmills. So
here was a footballer trying to get into wind energy, just as a company
built on wind energy was trying to get into football.

‘We
have a joint venture going on building windmills. We powered his
testimonial match against Juventus. We have our Ecotricity banners
everywhere. It was live on television. He wanted a seriously green
outcome for his testimonial and so he gave us some solar panels for the
roof of our stand.

‘He’s a good guy and very passionate about this. In fact, I was surprised how knowledgeable he was about the whole issue.’

‘It has saved him 150 hours per year. The grass is so finely cut that we don’t collect it, we leave it on the pitch, so we don’t remove any of the nutrients. We have electric-powered leaf-blowers and strimmers, so we are not burning petrol. We are building an electric tractor.

‘We have put in a system of drains and ring main, so that we can collect rainwater. We put it back into a tank and use it again. We have a wildflower meadow, we have habitats all around the ground, newts and slow-worms, orchids.

‘We want some LED floodlights. Our next big aim is to get the manager (Hockaday) into an electric car. And to get charging points at our ground, so that you could come here in an electric car.

‘We recently achieved EMAS, it’s like the gold-standard of environment management. Manchester United, by comparison, have just been granted ISO 14000. I mention that because that’s League One standard, though we applaud what they have done. We, however, are in the Champions League…

‘We are going to be recognised as the greenest football club on the planet. We would like to be promoted a few leagues because the higher we go, the more impact our message has.’

Vince won’t say who he supports, but went to watch England play Portugal in the European Champioship, saw Rui Costa in action and named his son after the playmaker.

‘The football culture surprised me. The attitude, the way the managers and players were treated by the board… well, it was Victorian.

‘One of the things I rail against is boardroom dress code. I want to go to an away game. I’m a big boy, I can dress myself, yet I have to discover beforehand what I can and can’t wear.

‘We have considered imposing a reverse dress code. If they insist we have to wear a suit and tie at their place, we will ban it at ours. We will insist on trainers! Swindon came to play in pre-season. Their directors loved it, they turned up in shorts and flip-flops.

‘We like to challenge the culture and convention of football,’ he adds with a smile.

After tackling the big electricity companies, leading the way on a football field should be child’s play.

Andy Murray turns football pundit on FIFA website

Match point of the day! Andy Murray turns football pundit

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UPDATED:

10:56 GMT, 7 December 2012

Andy Murray, US Open champion and Olympic tennis gold medallist, is interrupting his pre-season training in Miami to become a football pundit for the day.

FIFA have persuaded Murray to take over their Twitter feed @FIFA.com at 4.30pm on December 11 to take questions from fans about his passion for football.

Ask Andy: FIFA posted this image of Andy Murray on their twitter account to preview the webchat

Ask Andy: FIFA posted this image of Andy Murray on their twitter account to preview the webchat

According to FIFA, Murray supports Hibernian as well as Barcelona and Arsenal and is also a fantasy football enthusiast.

Murray’s most controversial views on football came at the 2006 Wimbledon Championship during the World Cup when he was asked who he would be supporting during the tournament. He infamously replied: 'Anyone who England are playing.'

Scotsman Murray insisted his comments had been taken out of context and had only been part of his friendly banter with Tim Henman.

Down and out: Andy Murray reflects on his loss to Switzerland's Roger Federer during the Barclays ATP World Tour Finals at the O2 Arena

Down and out: Andy Murray reflects on his loss to Switzerland's Roger Federer during the Barclays ATP World Tour Finals at the O2 Arena

The idea for Murray to talk about football came following discussions between FIFA and the world No 3’s management team XIX, who are keen for him to branch out from just talking about tennis.

Football and boxing are Murray’s other two favourite sports.

Twitter uses have to tweet their question to @FIFA.com and must include the hashtag #AskAndy by 4pm on December 9.

Hod rod: Murray played a friendly match against Andy Roddick at the Miami Tennis Cup earlier this month, as he begins preparations for the Australian Open

Hod rod: Murray played a friendly match against Andy Roddick at the Miami Tennis Cup earlier this month, as he begins preparations for the Australian Open

Meanwhile, Heather Watson has banned herself from playing football before the Australian Open next month after the British No 1 sprained her ankle in a kick-about this time last year and had to pull out of the warm-up events.

Sweden v England: Roy Hodgson greeted by friendly faces – Michael Walker

Friendly faces greet Hodgson 'homecoming' as 'big-draw' England prepare for Sweden

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UPDATED:

23:28 GMT, 13 November 2012

In the sports section of Sweden's Expressen newspaper on Tuesday, Watford were tipped to beat Wolves at Vicarage Road on Saturday.

Expressen also reckon Blackpool will win at Bristol City and, more boldly, Chelsea will leave West Bromwich with three points.

As for Sverige-England tonight, that's marked down for a draw.

Honour: England have been invited by Sweden to open their newly-built Friends Arena

Honour: England have been invited by Sweden to open their newly-built Friends Arena

Honour: England have been invited by Sweden to open their newly-built Friends Arena

The league tables of all four English divisions were printed. It was a reminder of the pull English football has in Scandinavia and, in part, is an explanation why, when Sweden planned to open their 240million Friends Arena – Friends being a charity of Swedbank – they chose to invite England.

The 'motherland of football', as Sepp Blatter calls England, may not be conscious of it on a daily basis, but England are still a big draw on the world stage.

Sweden's previous national stadium in Stockholm, Rasunda, has been closed by Brazil. Sweden share a bond with Brazil since the 1958 World Cup final held here. It is a compliment to England that they have been asked to open this stadium.

All smiles: Hodgson spoke of the great honour of his England side being invited to play in Sweden

All smiles: Hodgson spoke of the great honour of his England side being invited to play in Sweden

It was England, in 1937, who opened the Rasunda. So it is an occasion in Stockholm and, while the customary grumbles about international friendlies have been heard, this is also Roy Hodgson's last match of his first half-year in charge and his last for three months.

Hodgson marched into the ground last night and spoke of the 'great honour' of the invitation. Lennart Johansson, the 83-year-old former head of UEFA, had come to sit in the front row to see the England manager. There was a rousing 'Hello, Len!' from Hodgson.

After the press conference Steven Gerrard pointedly made his way to shake Johansson's hand.

'Hello, Len': Hodgson greets the former head of UEFA Lennart Johansson, who came to see the England boss

'Hello, Len': Hodgson greets the former head of UEFA Lennart Johansson, who came to see the England boss

Hodgson talked of the 'very interesting squad' he has brought with him, adding all were 'very keen and anxious to play in this game'.

He was clearly enthused about being here. Others are less so. The fixture might have created more of a tingle at home, of course, had the two countries not met in Kiev in June.

But that was the last instalment of a relationship that dates back to 1923 and tonight matters to Sweden. That in itself should make this more competitive than some friendlies.

Former Villain: Sweden No 2 Marcus Allback

Former Villain: Sweden No 2 Marcus
Allback

Sweden have the recent memory of their dramatic 4-4 draw in Germany – from 4-0 down. But they would like to beat England.

Because of that, Hodgson said it will be more of a test for the mix of young and old he has brought here.

Another factor that might make this differ from many friendlies is Hodgson. His manner last night was of a man coming home. Hodgson is well liked and respected here, a country he arrived in as a coach in 1976.

As Sweden manager Erik Hamren said: 'He has a good reputation here. I really like him as a coach and a person. He has been really good for Swedish football and is a big name in Sweden, acclaimed by all our coaches. There's big respect for him.'

That feeling is part of a connection that goes back to the beginning. Dig into so many European countries' football history and invariably there is a tale of an English pioneer, frequently coupled with railwaymen.

It was the same here, though the pioneer came later. George Raynor was never properly recognised or utilised in England, but he managed Sweden to the 1948 Olympic title, in London, as well as to the 1958 World Cup when they lost the final to a 17-year-old Pele.

It was a long time before England would allow a foreign manager but when it happened, in 2001, he came from Sweden: Sven Goran Eriksson.

The invention of the Premier League and the Bosman ruling have also meant a flow of Swedes to England. Marcus Allback, Hamren's assistant, played for Aston Villa.

Rather more memorably, so too did Olof Mellberg. There was Freddie Ljungberg at Arsenal, Anders Limpar before him and fleetingly Henrik Larsson at Manchester United post-Celtic.

With so much fuss over Wilfried Zaha's call-up and with Crystal Palace being Hodgson's first club as an aspiring player, there is also Tomas Brolin's short spell at Selhurst Park to remember.

Maybe after tonight, Wilf can expand on that.

England sqaud for Sweden friendly to be named by Roy Hodgson

Friendly fire: Why Sweden test is more than a 'distraction' for England boss Hodgson…

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UPDATED:

15:14 GMT, 7 November 2012

Meaningless distraction or match of great significance While many will regard England’s trip to Sweden next week as more clutter in an already crowded calendar, for Roy Hodgson this is not just ‘another’ friendly.

Hodgson’s reign as England manager has been very much a slow-burner, a mixed bag of draws against organised teams and workmanlike victories over the nations that England have been expected to beat, but he is now entering a crucial phase.

Sweden, whom England beat at Euro 2012 thanks to a late rally, are always obdurate opponents and can be relied upon to provide England with a good examination; they showed when salvaging a remarkable 4-4 draw against Germany that they should not be underestimated.

Friendly fire: Liverpool youngster Raheem Sterling could make his England debut against Sweden next week

Friendly fire: Liverpool youngster Raheem Sterling could make his England debut against Sweden next week

This, however, is one game that Hodgson will not want to lose, not least because he is returning to the country where is managerial career began back in 1976. With that in mind, then, do not be surprised if the squad he announces tomorrow is sprinkled with senior names.

Of course there will be some experimentation. Young talents such as the Liverpool pair Raheem Sterling and Jonjo Shelvey have been pushing for inclusion and Sterling, in some ways, would be better served going to Sweden than playing for the Under-21s against Northern Ireland at Blackpool.

Sterling, whose performances for Liverpool have been getting stronger and braver with each passing week, was given his first taste of senior football Hodgson when he was just 15 in a pre-season friendly against Borussia Moenchengladbach. The temptation to pitch him in will be huge.

What Hodgson does with Jack Wilshere, though, will be the most intriguing aspect of all. The Arsenal midfielder has only just returned from 14-months out with injury but, in his period of absence, he experienced the curious of phenomenon of his reputation actually blossoming without him kicking a ball.

Forward thinking: England boss Roy Hodgson

Forward thinking: England boss Roy Hodgson

Wilshere’s ability to give and go, to link up play and keep Arsenal’s passing carousel turning means he will, in time, become a hugely important figure for England and Hodgson’s eagerness to get him included back in the fold is understandable. England, after all, are not blessed with midfielders like Wilshere.

But it would be rash to pitch him back into this environment so soon. Players who have been out for long spells can occasionally be susceptible to muscle injuries and it would be maddening for all if Wilshere tweaked, say, a hamstring playing in a match when he wasn’t desperately needed.

‘A full game would be too much at the moment,’ Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger said recently. ‘I will speak about it with Roy, but what is important now is that he gets back to his level. People have to be a little bit patient to see the best of him again.

‘It is a friendly. Jack should skip that. What is important now is that he gets back to full fitness for this team. Once he is back he will play for England again.’

Of that there is no doubt. There are plenty of suitable dates in the future for Wilshere to wear Three Lions on his chest – against Brazil at Wembley in February, for instance.

Asking him to do it again in Sweden, however, might not be the wisest move – even if this is not just ‘another friendly’ for Hodgson.

WHO HODGSON COULD TURN TO…

Steven Caulker – Tottenham
A superb loan spell at Swansea last season has been rewarded with promotion to the Tottenham first-team under Andre Villas-Boas and the 20-year-old is adapting well.
Has international experience after representing Great Britain at the Olympics and it seems only a matter of time before England caps start to trickle in.

Carl Jenkinson – Arsenal
Jumped up two leagues to join Arsenal from Charlton a year ago and it showed in his first full season as the right-back struggled to adapt.
But Arsene Wenger’s patience and coaching has paid off well and a much improved start to this season means the 20-year-old, who is capped by Finland at Under 21 level, is firmly in Hodgson’s plans.

Raheem Sterling – Liverpool
Will he play for Jamaica or England At just 17-years-old it all seems premature but his performances since breaking into the Liverpool team have caught the eye of many and Hodgson will be keen to get him into the England set-up as quick as possible – if you’re good enough, you’re old enough as Michael Owen proved.

Mark Noble – West Ham
There’s been no way in to the centre
of England’s midfield in recent years with Gerrard, Lampard, Scott
Parker, Gareth Barry and Michael Carrick all playing regular parts, but
Hammers fans will argue a case for Noble to be capped. The 25-year-old (pictured, below)
is approaching his best years and looks confident defending or attacking
a penalty box.

In with a shout: Mark Noble

Tom Ince – Blackpool
The son of former England captain, Paul. The winger’s performances in the Championship have highlighted the attention of many Premier League clubs with Manchester United the latest to be linked with the former Liverpool player. Has no Premier League experience but it seems only a matter of time before the 20-year-old gains it one way or another.

Sammy Ameobi – Newcastle
The younger brother of 11 years to Shola is one to watch at Newcastle, with his confidence and ability on the ball in attacking areas marking out his potential. The 20-year-old’s versatility to play in a striker’s role as well as on the flank, especially the left, would also help plug a problem area for England. Needs more starts for Newcastle but is improving fast.

Charlie Austin – Burnley
Steve Bull, Dave Nugent and Jay Bothroyd have all played in an England attack while representing lower league clubs, so why can’t Austin The 23-year-old striker has scored the most goals in Europe this season with an incredible record of 20 goals from 17 games playing in the Championship.

DAN RIPLEY

Braga 1 West Ham 1

Braga 1 West Ham 1: Late Reid goal rescues draw for visitors

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UPDATED:

00:21 GMT, 11 August 2012

Fantasy football 2012

It took a last-gasp equaliser to rescue West Ham from defeat in Portugal, as they battled back to draw 1-1 in their friendly match against Portuguese side Braga.

Winston Reid's late goal earned The Hammers a draw in a feisty game at Braga's spectacular A Pedreira ground – the name means 'The Quarry', due to the intimidating rock-face behind one goal.

Mark Noble's deflected free-kick
clipped the post before Braga took the lead with a Paulo Vinicius
penalty after a handball by James Collins.

Feisty: The game was hard fought in Portugal and West Ham were lucky to get a draw in the end

Feisty: The game was hard fought in Portugal and West Ham were lucky to get a draw in the end

Braga changed their kit at the interval, and it proved to be unlucky for the hosts

Braga changed their kit at the interval, and it proved to be unlucky for the hosts

Curiously, the hosts emerged in their away kit for the second half – and it proved unlucky, as substitute Baiano had a goal disallowed before Reid poked home the equaliser.

The late breakthrough came when James Tomkins met Matthew Taylor's corner, and Reid popped up from nowhere to prod the loose ball into the back of the net.

West Ham lapsed in concentration again after the goal, and Jussi Jaaskelainen was forced to tip a vicious shot over the bar.

A corner followed, and Tomkins was on hand to head it to safety when the shriek of the whistle ended proceedings.

Sam Allardyce will be glad to get another game under his squad's belt ahead of their bid to stay in the Premier League after being promoted from the Championship via the playoffs last season.

Friendly There were a number of tough tackles and collisions during the game

Friendly There were a number of tough tackles and collisions during the game

Attrition: Mark Noble gets up close and personal (left) while James Tomkins is left floored (right)

Joey Barton denies loan move to Fleetwood Town

QPR bad boy Barton denies loan move to League Two minnows Fleetwood Town

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UPDATED:

18:09 GMT, 3 August 2012

Fantasy football 2012

QPR midfielder Joey Barton has denied reports that he has joined npower League Two newcomers Fleetwood Town on loan.

The 29-year-old will miss the opening 12 Premier League matches after he was sent off on the final day of last season at Manchester City and was later found guilty of two counts of violent conduct by the Football Association.

Friendly appearance: Joey Barton played for Fleetwood Town in a friendly match against SPL side Kilmarnock

Friendly appearance: Joey Barton played for Fleetwood Town in a friendly match against SPL side Kilmarnock

Barton has spent pre-season training
with Fleetwood and BBC Lancashire had reported that he could extend his
stay with the Cod Army.

'BBC news jumping the gun a bit,” he said on Twitter. “I've not signed for Fleetwood. Just currently enjoying training there…'

And the QPR say there are no talks
ongoing between the two clubs, a club spokesman said: 'QPR can confirm
Joey Barton has not signed for Fleetwood Town and the club have had no
discussions regarding a loan to the League Two side.

Keeping fit: Barton joined the League Two newboys to train during pre-season

Keeping fit: Barton joined the League Two newboys to train during pre-season

Joining in: Barton has been training at Fleetwood while he was banned from QPR's pre-season tour of Asia

Joining in: Barton has been training at Fleetwood while he was banned from QPR's pre-season tour of Asia

'The club agreed for Joey Barton to
train with Fleetwood Town but has no desire to loan the player to a
League Two club at this time.'

QPR stripped Barton of the captaincy and fined him six weeks' wages following the incident at the Etihad Stadium in May.

It"s the making of Mario Balotelli! Man City"s problem boy is helping to usher in a brave, new era for Italy

It's the making of Mario! City's problem boy helping to usher in a brave, new era for Italy

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UPDATED:

23:11 GMT, 30 June 2012

As he stood tall, shirt off, torso rippling and the colour of his skin proudly exposed, Mario Balotelli seemed keen to make a point in Warsaw's National Stadium on Thursday.

Was it a riposte to the Gazzetta dello Sport cartoonist who had depicted him as King Kong prior to the England match Was it a final, definitive answer to Italian fans who had racially insulted him and displayed banners saying 'No to a multi-ethnic national team' two years ago in a friendly match against Romania

Sitting comfortably: Mario Balotelli takes a break during training

Sitting comfortably: Mario Balotelli takes a break during training

Middle man: Balotelli is always centre of attention

Middle man: Balotelli is always centre of attention

Balotelli may have been unwilling to explain his behaviour following the glorious second goal that ultimately finished Germany's Euro 2012 challenge but what is clear is that a 21-year-old footballer, Ghanaian by ethnicity but Italian by birth and adopted by white Italian parents, is ushering in a new era for the Azzurri at the European Championship.

Seasoned Italian correspondents cannot remember a black Italian ever having had such an impact on the nation's popular culture. For while Andrea Pirlo is the outfield leader of this entertaining team and goalkeeper and captain Gianluigi Buffon the vocal driving force, its vitality and future is represented by Balotelli.

Cesare Prandelli, the man who has guided what many considered a mediocre team to the brink of a glorious victory in today's final against Spain in Kiev, is now reaping the rewards of investing so much faith in a player who might have been considered too volatile to integrate into a squad playing tournament football.

The coach praises the job Roberto Mancini has done with Balotelli at Manchester City, but his compatriot had been reduced to declaring the striker 'finished' after his red card against Arsenal as recently as April.

Mario Balotelli of Italy looks on during a training session

Mario Balotelli of Italy looks on during a training session

Thirsty work: Balotelli and Daniele De Rossi

Thirsty work: Balotelli and Daniele De Rossi

However, Prandelli, who dropped Balotelli from his squad in March because of his indiscipline at City, took the risk and now receives the rewards. On Friday he grinned as Italian journalists applauded him into a press conference and now his job is to puncture excessive expectations.

He cautions against defining Balotelli as the symbol of a multi-racial Italy. 'I don't think we can solve racial problems just through one game, just because Mario Balotelli scored,' he said. 'He's not so much the symbol of the team, the shirt is the symbol of the team. And he is Italian. Full stop.'

But at times Balotelli still seems something of an outsider. After the win against Germany he sought out his adopted mother, Silvia, who wept as she embraced him. It was the most moving image of the tournament but while that was happening most of his team-mates had walked over to the Italian fans and were dancing an excited jig together in the middle of the pitch – without Balotelli.

It may be more realistic, however, to measure what Balotelli and Prandelli represent in football terms. Last Sunday, having beaten England at Kiev's Olympic Stadium, Prandelli spelt out his footballing philosophy. And it felt like a challenge to Roy Hodgson's England.

'A lot of Italian coaches want to start playing football now, not just playing for the result,' said Prandelli. 'We have this mentality – we want to play. This is the way football's going in the future and I think Italian sides will want to play as we are.'

And of England 'We tried to bring them out of their defence, but they didn't want to come out,' he said. It is the ultimate irony. Just as the English finally learn how to defend, thanks to former AC Milan and Inter coaches, the rest of the world embraces attacking football.

The makeover Prandelli has given the Italian game is similar to that which Jrgen Klinsmann achieved for Germany at the 2006 World Cup, foundations on which Joachim Low's team have built impressively, notwithstanding their defeat on Thursday night.

The task is greater though for Prandelli, the former Fiorentina and Parma coach. The caricature of Italian football would have it that cynicism abides on the pitch – this is the nation that invented catenaccio and revered Claudio Gentile – and off it.

Strike a pose: Italy's Mario Balotelli celebrates after scoring his second goal against Germany

Strike a pose: Italy's Mario Balotelli celebrates after scoring his second goal against Germany

Clinical: Balotelli heads home against Germany

Clinical: Balotelli heads home against Germany

The 2006 Calciopoli fixing scandals has been followed by the latest betting scandal, Scommessopoli, which has embroiled current Juventus coach Antonio Conte and defender Domenico Criscito, who was withdrawn from the current squad because of the investigation.

Leaving aside that Italy's greatest successes in 1982 and 2006 came in the wake of match-fixing scandals, Prandelli presents a different face of Italian football. He even dropped Daniele De Rossi in March for elbowing a player. 'I wanted to display good football, something really pleased with. we have taken our methods,' he said.

Prandelli already has a groundswell of sympathy in Italy death of his wife, Manuela, his childhood sweetheart, from cancer five years ago. Here he has been emgaging and quirky. After victories, he and his coaching staff have set off in the small hours of the morning to walk to a Krakow monastry – the first time they completed the entire 15 miles on foot – as a pilgrimage of thanks.

The great AC Milan coach Arrigo Sacchi, Fabio Capello's mentor, has said that Prandelli is revolutionising their game and 20 million Italian viewers tuned in to watch the Germany match, a statistic that has made the coach proud. 'Before this tournament everyone was more concerned with a Juventus-Milan game than the national team,' said Prandelli. 'Now we're getting results and everyone is supporting the team.'

It helps if you have the metronomic passing of Pirlo, the energy of De Rossi and Claudio Marchisio and explosiveness of Antonio Cassano.

The youthful spirit and inspiration, though, is all from Balotelli. And while Serie A is routinely derided by little Englanders, Italy does have a habit of producing players who can actually pass the ball to each other.

As for Prandelli, he is all smiles for now. A month ago, Italian Prime Minister Mario Monti was so disillusioned with the latest scandal engulfing the game, he said it might be better if Italian football was suspended for three years. Prandelli, it seems, saw a politician eyeing a bandwagon.

'I simply said I don't agree with this view of football,' he said. 'We like to play fair. And if you think as Prime Minister or as a Government that the Italy team does not represent its country in a proper way then perhaps it's better for us to stay at home.'

Prime Minister Monti is presumably glad they did not. On Friday he confirmed that he would be flying to Kiev to attend the final. It seems Italian football is worth watching after all.

Euro 2012: Holland"s failure – why were they so bad?

Dutch disaster: Just how did Holland fail so miserably at Euro 2012

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UPDATED:

15:20 GMT, 18 June 2012

Robin van Persie. Wesley Sneijder. Arjen Robben. Just a few of Holland's players – all of whom could stake their claim for a place in a world XI. It seems perplexing that such a talented collective could be dumped out of Euro 2012 with not a point to show for their endeavours.

It's the first time for over two decades that the Oranje have lost three games running. So how did it go so wrong How did Bert Van Marwijk's men fail to make it through to the quarter-finals

Dumped out: Arjen Robben and his colleagues depart without a point

Dumped out: Arjen Robben and his colleagues depart without a point

Heading home: Rafael van der Vaart looks down as he gets ready to fly away from Euro 2012

Heading home: Rafael van der Vaart looks down as he gets ready to fly away from Euro 2012

Misfiring megastars

Robin van Persie scored an incredible 43 goals in 54 appearances for club and country this season but with the exception of one moment of magic against Germany, looked like he'd never seen a goal before in his life. Several chances which he would have buried in an Arsenal shirt went begging, most notably against Denmark when Holland had over 30 shots but managed to find the target with a paltry five.

Arguably worse was Arjen Robben. The Bayern Munich winger has had an end to the 2011-12 season to forget. A terrible penalty against Chelsea in his side's Champions League final defeat followed by being booed by fans at a Bayern v Holland friendly match before Euro 2012. And after arriving at the tournament seemed intent on cutting inside from the right wing and lashing shot after shot over the bar and into the disappointed crowd.

Oops: Robin van Persie was off-colour

Oops: Robin van Persie was off-colour

Disastrous defending

The Dutch defence has long been the weakest part of their team and at Euro 2012 it was no different. Jetro Willems, at 18 years and 71 days old, became the youngest ever player at a European Championship when he played against Denmark, and sadly he looked it.

The PSV left-back stepped up to replace his club-mate Erik Pieters and although he was nothing worse than shaky against Denmark, endured a torrid time at the hands of Germany and Thomas Muller in particular.

Holland's other full back, Gregory van de Wiel, was almost as bad defensively. Several lapses in concentration gave chances to his opponents and Premier League clubs interested in him should re-assess whether they still want to splash the cash. Chelsea are one of the clubs linked – he would be a like-for-like replacement for the defensively inept Jose Bosingwa.

Raw: The inexperienced Jetro Willems did not aid a shaky back-line

Raw: The inexperienced Jetro Willems did not aid a shaky back-line

Dubious tactics

Starting with two holding midfielders against Denmark was a puzzling choice. Nigel de Jong and Mark van Bommel are destroyers – far happier at crushing opposition moves than building attacks themselves. Perhaps it seems a little churlish to criticise them given that they created so many chances against Denmark, but given the impact Rafael van der Vaart had when he started in the Portugal match, maybe not.

Picking both of them against Germany was not a bad decision given the ability Joachim Low's side have in the centre of the park, but they still underperformed. So the blame lies both with Van Marwijk and the two players.

Force: Nigel de Jong was selected in all three games

Force: Nigel de Jong was selected in all three games

Dressing room divisions

Holland and dressing room harmony rarely are mentioned in the same breath. And this tournament is no exception. It's not been as rocky as it was at Euro 1996 when Edgar Davids was sent home, but still no doubt counter-productive.

'Of course there were some internal issues but we will keep them indoors,' Robben told Voetbal International. 'The hunger in the team is there,' he added. 'But we failed together. And I mean the technical staff, the players, the whole team. This is the harsh reality of the sporting world. We must all, therefore, look in the mirror.'

Van der Vaart and Klaas-Jan Huntelaar complained about being left out of the starting XI against Denmark – admittedly with good reason given the failings of the Dutch – but even when they did start, against Portugal, they still could not muster a point.

Van Bommel, who was dropped, said the atmosphere was worse than when the side reached the 2010 World Cup final. 'I am captain and will always protect my players but the atmosphere was different than two years ago. Why that was I don't know, I can only speak for myself, not the other guys.'

Mutiny: Bert van Marwijk's players were not impressed with some decisions

Mutiny: Bert van Marwijk's players were not impressed with some decisions

The Group of Death

In the group of death, someone had to die. It was Holland. Beaten – perhaps fortuitously – by an organised Denmark in the first game, they then came up against the might Germany and were seen off by some stunning goals from Mario Gomez.

Finally, it was Portugal. If they had faced the Portugal which scraped through against Denmark and lost to Germany, they might have got the result they needed. But they played a Portugal with Cristiano Ronaldo on top form.

The Real Madrid winger almost
single-handedly put Holland to the sword, notching both goals and
hitting the post as many times again. He ran the game and terrorised
Holland's weak defence. Van der Vaart's wonderful opener seemed as if it
would bring Holland back into contention for quarter-final
qualification, but Ronaldo put paid to that.

Next The fall-out. And if Holland's history is anything to go by, it will be both long and painful.

Torturer-in-chief: Cristiano Ronaldo shredded Holland

Torturer-in-chief: Cristiano Ronaldo shredded Holland