Xabi Alonso could return to Premier League

Alonso's Madrid future in doubt as ex-Liverpool star ponders Premier League return

|

UPDATED:

06:41 GMT, 31 December 2012

Xabi Alonso has admitted he could make a stunning return to the Premier League.

The Real Madrid midfielder, 31, has 18 months remaining on his contract with the Spanish giants and talks over extending it are on hold.

Alonso spent five years at Liverpool before returning to his homeland in 2009.

England bound Xabi Alonso (right) could leave Real Madrid

England bound Xabi Alonso (right) could leave Real Madrid

'I've no idea what will happen,' Alonso told reporters in Spain.

'I have not decided on my future. I will only stay at Real Madrid if I can offer the same level on the pitch as I can now and we will see what happens in the next few months.

'There is always a chance I could go back to the Premier League as I always enjoyed good times there.'

Fan's favourite: Alonso enjoyed a successful five-year spell at Liverpool

Fan's favourite: Alonso enjoyed a successful five-year spell at Liverpool

Alonso helped Liverpool win the Champions League, FA Cup and Community Shield before adding to his trophy haul in Madrid.

Last season's La Liga title followed the club's Copa del Rey triumph a year earlier while Alonso was an integral part of the Spain sides which won Euro 2008 and 2012, along with the 2010 World Cup.

He was also named the best midfielder in the Spanish top flight last season.

Europa League fifth official mocked for warm-up at FC Twente match

Really, what do they do Europa League fifth official becomes laughing stock for pathetic warm-up

|

UPDATED:

16:08 GMT, 7 December 2012

They are, quite possibly, the most pointless innovation in the history of football – and now it seems that the Europa League fifth officials can't even be bothered themselves.

Hilarious video has emerged from Dutch television coverage of the match between FC Twente and Helsingborg on Thursday of Greek fifth official Anastassios Kalos stretching his neck muscles before the kick-off.

Shall I Greek fifth official Anastassios Kalos ponders whether to run through a warm-up before the FC Twente v Helsingborg Europa League match

Shall I Greek fifth official Anastassios Kalos ponders whether to run through a warm-up before the FC Twente v Helsingborg Europa League match

And stretch! Kalos crouches and goes for a lunge to get his muscles warmed up

And stretch! Kalos crouches and goes for a lunge to get his muscles warmed up

Anyone there Kalos takes a good long look to make sure the line is straight

Anyone there Kalos takes a good long look to make sure the line is straight

Not wanting to concern himself with a full warm-up, Kalos makes do with a couple of lunges on the edge of the six-yard box as though stooping to head an imaginary ball.

It at least allowed him to check if the penalty box paintwork was perfectly straight at the Arke Stadion.

Still, it was probably more than he did for the remainder of the evening.

Chelsea fans should be careful what they wish for from Roman Abramovich – Des Kelly

Fans should be careful what they wish for… or Roman might end up giving them their old Chelsea back after all

|

UPDATED:

00:24 GMT, 1 December 2012

They have a song at Stamford Bridge that brings together thousands of unhappy supporters. It bubbles up in between the boos aimed at the current patsy in the manager’s dug out.

It punctuates the painfully long and uncomfortable silences that have distinguished games at the London ground of late. The cry is: ‘We Want Our Chelsea Back’.

This chorus reverberates around the stadium.

Winter storm: Angry Chelsea supporters protest against the appointment of Rafa Benitez

Winter storm: Angry Chelsea supporters protest against the appointment of Rafa Benitez

Winter storm: Angry Chelsea supporters protest against the appointment of Rafa Benitez

DM.has('rcp',”twitter”);

Twitter Avatar

Loading tweets…

Who knows Maybe Roman Abramovich sits there humming along, too, while he stares into space and ponders precisely when he is going to sack his most recent appointment.

But I have a question: Which Chelsea do the fans want back What are they actually nostalgic for

Are they singing for a return to the ‘good old days’ when you could stand in The Shed and try to make out the players somewhere in the distance beyond an old running track. The days when you could kick bits of concrete about, dash from the police truncheons and wait to hear if the Greater London Council would allow Ken Bates to turn on his electric fence

Or are they pining for the Chelsea that just preceded Abramovich, the Chelsea where nobody really knew who the owners were The one with shiny new stands and some shops, but teetering on the brink of bankruptcy with debts of around 80million

Or maybe folk are just nostalgic for those hazy, barely-remembered days when Chelsea were not only European Champions but top of the Premier League table as well. When was it now Oh, yes. About five weeks ago. A golden age, I’m sure we can all agree.

We want our Chelsea back I’m afraid it hasn’t been anyone’s Chelsea except Abramovich’s since the moment he walked through the door, beamed a billionaire’s smile at Bates and bought the club by withdrawing the equivalent of a few days’ interest from his current account. In that moment, the club was his and his alone.

Trigger happy: Chelsea owner Roman Abramovich

Keeping the seat warm: Rafael Benitez

Keepnig the seat warm: How long will Rafael Benitez last under trigger happy Roman Abramovich (left)

The oil tycoon hasn’t exactly said a great deal over the years, but on Day One he certainly signaled his intentions clearly enough. ‘Chelsea is a hobby,’ he said. ‘It is for fun, not an investment,’ he added. As those words spread across the land you could hear the balding heads of chairmen and directors hit their mahogany desks with a despairing thud. Abramovich instantly re-wrote the rules in the English Premier League. Out went the ‘local businessman made good’. In came the ‘global oligarchs who could do whatever they flaming well liked’.

Chelsea was – and is – just another toy for him. The yachts, the private jets, the luxury properties, the cars, are all fine, but he had himself a real-life computer game. He could buy, sell, sack and move anyone he cared to.

Right now Abramovich wants to be proved right on Fernando Torres and everyone and everything is being realigned on his personal board game to try to make that happen. To all the people singing about ‘our Chelsea’, I’m afraid it isn’t. At Chelsea, everyone pays to watch Abramovich play.

Good old days The old Shed End at Stamford Bridge was long gone before Roman arrived

Good old days The old Shed End at Stamford Bridge was long gone before Roman arrived

Before Abramovich: Frank Sinclair (above) and Jody Morris (below) in action for Chelsea

Before Abramovich: Frank Sinclair (above) and Jody Morris (below) in action for Chelsea

Before Abramovich: Frank Sinclair (above) and Jody Morris (below) in action for Chelsea

He needs the fans only to make some noise and keep him company. He could probably sack the lot of you and tell his players to perform in an empty stadium if he had a mind.

So if you’re a fan unhappy with what is happening at Stamford Bridge, why on earth are you jeering Rafa Benitez He just answered the telephone when the Russian got bored of the last boss.

The Spaniard has done nothing wrong. He took on a task any out-of-work manager (except Pep Guardiola) would seize with both hands, if only for the inevitable pay off. Booing him for not being Roberto Di Matteo, Jose Mourinho or even Guardiola seems futile and somewhat self-defeating.

More from Des Kelly…

Des Kelly: I'm sorry, but Chelsea are an utter disgrace
23/11/12

Des Kelly: Ibrahimovic's goal was NOT the greatest ever scored
16/11/12

Des Kelly: Just man up like Rod and let your teardrops explode
09/11/12

Des Kelly: No Chelsea player heard Terry abuse Ferdinand… now they're blessed with the hearing of a piano tuner
02/11/12

Des Kelly: The finger of blame will only point at you, Roberto
26/10/12

Des Kelly: Now it is time for football's three monkeys to wise up
19/10/12

Des Kelly: Really, what are these people who support Armstrong on
12/10/12

Des Kelly: Terry affair must not derail battle to defeat racism… so let's stop the schism
28/09/12

VIEW FULL ARCHIVE

There’s a strange echo of this scenario happening at Arsenal. They are singing ‘We Want Our Arsenal back’. Only I’m not sure how they intend that to happen.

Do they want Arsene Wenger to rewind the clock to the days before he had to compete with Russian oil moguls and Middle Eastern sheiks, when the Gunners thrived in their old stadium, as if that would cure the trophy drought

When they say ‘Our Arsenal’, does that mean they want it taken out of the hands of the major shareholder American Stan Kroenke and put in the control of Uzbekistan’s Alisher Usmanov instead Does that give Arsenal back

It’s very confusing.

Supporters at Stamford Bridge are too timid to abuse Abramovich in case he spins on his heel and actually does return Chelsea to them, which would be a disaster. So they abuse Benitez instead.

At The Emirates, fans are rightly nervous of losing Arsene Wenger. So club chief executive Ivan Gazidis gets it in the neck instead, because he earns a few quid and nobody’s really sure whose fault it is when Robin van Persie flees.

Fans can certainly complain if they wish. There is a grand tradition of football rage. But the followers of both clubs should be careful for what they wish. Nostalgia is a seductive liar.

I may need a lawyer… any ideas

The not very shy, but hopefully retiring, Peter Herbert, chairman of the Society of Black Lawyers, took time out from lecturing the world last week to cast his organisation as ‘victims’.

He complained: ‘The Society of Black Lawyers, in seeking to challenge racism in football, has been accused of being “nave”, “publicity-seeking”, “unhelpful” or out to “get work”. Organisations or individuals who speak out on human rights are seldom welcomed by those whose inaction or collusion with racism is challenged.’

Actually, Herbert is wrong.

The Society Of Black Lawyers has not been accused of using football has a vehicle for shameless self-promotion. But I think he’ll find an individual called Peter Herbert has.

It is an impression bolstered somewhat by Herbert’s website, which, as the football365 website helpfully pointed out, is lovingly adorned with an array of pictures of Herbert, posing alongside the Rev Al Sharpton, or a Mercedes. Clearly, he is not averse to the limelight.

But something occurred to me. In recent weeks, I believe I have referred to Herbert as being nave, publicity seeking, unhelpful and out to get work. So is he accusing me of ‘colluding with racism’ If so it is an outrageous charge.

I should consult a good lawyer. I wonder if Herbert knows of one

Quote of the week

‘If I was going to lie to you, honestly, I
would lie.’

Aston Villa manager Paul Lambert — or ‘Honest Paul’, as he
will now be known — strengthens the case for the use of lie detector
machines in football press conferences.

Who are you kidding, Becks

David Beckham is leaving Los Angeles and could be heading for Monaco. What on earth would attract the star footballer to the multi-millionaires’ favourite enclave Could it be the fact that his salary would top 10 million a year before tax Or, indeed, after tax, too

With overwhelming optimism, Beckham also says he has not ruled out appearing for England under Roy Hodgson. In a similar vein, I have not ruled out a night of nude wrestling with Megan Fox.

Feeling Scott-free does not mean it’s gone swimmingly

The postmortem into British Swimming’s failures in the pool at London 2012 is still under wraps, despite Michael Scott’s departure.

The performance director quit last weekend. I was happy to reveal the news on these pages after pointing out the lunacy of an arrangement where Scott was often trying to direct Team GB’s performance from Melbourne, some 10,500 miles away.

The group reviewing British Swimming’s Olympic underachievement agreed and wisely recommended Scott either move to the country that paid his 1.3million contract — or depart.

Quit: Former British swimming chief Michael Scott

Quit: Former British swimming chief Michael Scott

Scott decided to quit. His air fares
alone would have paid for a few British coaches. When the news broke,
the share price of companies trading in dry roasted peanuts plummeted,
but hardly anyone batted an eyelid.

Except for British Swimming chief executive David Sparkes. He said: ‘We wish to pay tribute to Michael. He leaves with our sincere thanks.’

But then Sparkes would say that, since it was he who handed Scott a new four-year deal in April.
We can assume he did not consider his performance director’s regular absences an issue, only to find himself contradicted and undermined by the review body he set up.

Quite a tricky situation for a chief executive to distance himself from, I’d say. If the plan for your chosen performance director implodes, inevitably there are calls for accountability further up the chain of command.

They seem to understand this Down Under. When Australian Swimming set about an independent review, following an equally disappointing showing in the London pool, their chief executive promptly quit.

Kevin Neil, Swimming Australia CEO, said: ‘We are undertaking various reviews to set a course for a new future and it is therefore appropriate to step aside.’

So, in Australia, the man in charge decided to carry the can. In Britain, the man in charge tries to kick the can somewhere else.

British Swimming currently has no head coach, no performance director and no head of finance. There are also suggestions that Sparkes is barely on speaking terms with his No 2, Ian Mason, who is grandly titled ‘The Director of World Class Operations’, although a simple ‘Director of Operations’ should suffice for now.

It’s not exactly going swimmingly, is it

The review findings were expected at the end of October. Now the proposed release date is December 6. That cannot be a good sign. Either way, some answers are well overdue.

Raheem Sterling in line for England game against Sweden

Sterling set for England call-up as Roy ponders Kop star for Sweden clash

|

UPDATED:

01:16 GMT, 7 November 2012

England manager Roy Hodgson is giving serious consideration to naming Liverpool starlet Raheem Sterling in his squad to face Sweden later this month.

The teenager has been a revelation for Brendan Rodgers' side this season after making his first-team breakthrough under Kenny Dalglish at the end of the previous term.

Centre of attention: Sterling has starred for Liverpool this season

Centre of attention: Sterling has starred for Liverpool this season

His fine performances saw him called up into the full England squad for the World Cup qualifier against Ukraine before Stuart Pearce named him in his Under-21 set-up for the infamous clash against Serbia. And Hodgson is set to name Sterling in his squad to face Swedes.

It is hoped the move will persuade the youngster into committing his international future to England in the face of serious interest from his native Jamaica.

Raheem Sterling set for England call-up

Hodgson ponders handing 17-year-old Sterling call up for England's World Cup qualifiers

|

UPDATED:

06:55 GMT, 3 October 2012

Roy Hodgson is considering keeping Liverpool winger Raheem Sterling, 17, in the senior England squad for the World Cup qualifiers against San Marino and Poland rather than letting him join the Under 21s for their Euro play-off against Serbia.

The 17-year-old received a surprise
call-up for England's World Cup qualifier against Ukraine after a number of good performances for his club.

And he is expected to be handed a new deal at Anfield on his 18th birthday in December.

Breakthrough: Sterling has impressed this season at Liverpool

Breakthrough: Sterling has impressed this season at Liverpool

England are under pressure to get their World Cup bid back on track after the below-par performance at home against Ukraine.

The Three Lions were held to a 1-1 draw, but will be hoping to put that behind them with maximum points from the forthcoming qualifiers.

Teenage kicks: Sterling has enjoyed a fine start to the season with Liverpool

Teenage kicks: Sterling has enjoyed a fine start to the season with Liverpool

Kyle Walker desperate to make it into England"s Euro 2012 squad

Walker desperate to make the cut as Hodgson ponders Euro 2012 squad

|

UPDATED:

12:04 GMT, 9 May 2012

Kyle Walker has dismissed any notion that the pain of missing out on a Euro 2012 place could be eased by the fact he has plenty of chances to feature for England at a major tournament.

The Tottenham defender has enjoyed a stellar season so far.

A regular under Harry Redknapp, Walker earned his first two England caps in November, has recently been crowned PFA Young Player of the Year and only last week was awarded a new five-year contract at Spurs.

Desire: Kyle Walker wants to make the England Euro 2012 squad

Desire: Kyle Walker wants to make the England Euro 2012 squad

Not bad for a 21-year-old, who four years ago was in the reserve team at Sheffield United and spent last term on loan at Aston Villa.

However, the Sheffield-born defender is not satisfied yet.

He is desperate to be part of the 23-man squad new manager Roy Hodgson is set to unveil for this summer's European Championships.

And there will be no consolation if he fails.

Walker said: 'No chance. It does matter.

'I want to represent my country. It is the thing I have been dreaming about since I was a little kid.

'I used to play countless games on the Play Station. I was always England. I wished I was there and, fingers crossed, I will be on that plane.

'I have an important game for Tottenham against Fulham first.

'Hopefully I can cap off a great season and then it will follow on into the summer.'

Whilst there are many who feel Walker will be an automatic choice, he realises the situation is not quite so simple.

Liverpool's Glen Johnson was clearly the preferred pick of former boss Fabio Capello but the Italian's shock exit has offered Manchester City's Micah Richards an opportunity that otherwise might not have arisen.

In addition, Manchester United duo Chris Smalling and Phil Jones both featured for the Three Lions in competitive games before Walker's debut came in the November friendly defeat of world champions Spain at Wembley.

Tough: Walker knows he will have plenty of competition for the role

Tough: Walker knows he will have plenty of competition for the role

'There is massive competition for the right-back slot,' he said.

'But I am still learning and still want to learn. I am trying to be the best I can be.'

The additional problem is that none of England's players can be exactly sure what they need to do in order to impress Roy Hodgson.

Had Harry Redknapp got the job, as most people expected, Walker would have known through working with him every day in Tottenham's drive for a Champions League return.

Now though, all bets are off as Hodgson has given little clue as to his thinking beyond a vague statement about how seriously he will consider the players responsible for getting England to Poland and Ukraine.

'Everyone has a fair run-in,' said Walker.

'Obviously, Roy Hodgson watches the Premier League and will be aware of what is going on.

'Everyone has a chance to be on that plane. We all need to prove to him that we can do the business at the Euros.'

And,
whilst his own international experience is not extensive, Walker has
been around long enough to know the spirit within the England camp is
capable of overcoming any minor difficulties in a new manager being
appointed so close to a major tournament.

Chances: Having more opportunities to play won't stop Walker being upset if he misses out this time around

Chances: Having more opportunities to play won't stop Walker being upset if he misses out this time around

'When we do meet up with England, the team morale is there,' he said.

'It is a good laugh. It is enjoyable.

'You are putting on an England shirt and running out in front of all those fans worldwide. It is an honour.

'If we just go out and play the football that we play every week at our clubs, who knows what will happen”

For Walker, the challenges mount up. Getting in the squad, getting in the team, trying to win something.

He is relishing every one.

'I didn't expect to be in this position but I have learned in football that anything can happen,' he said.

'It is only four years ago that I was playing in the reserves at Sheffield United.

'It has been an incredible four years. Hopefully I am on that plane, then I will be in the team singing the national anthem.

'Who knows what will happen from there We might even get a medal.'

Kyle Walker was speaking at the launch of Football Mash Up, an initiative set up by the FA and England's sponsors Vauxhall to reduce the football drop-out rate of teenagers between the ages of 14 and 17.

Wayne Smith ponders England offer from Stuart Lancaster

Smith ponders England offer with Lancaster expecting to land Kiwi

|

UPDATED:

21:35 GMT, 26 April 2012

Stuart Lancaster has confirmed that he is awaiting decisions from Wayne Smith and Mike Catt after inviting them to join his England management team, but emphasised that he would retain hands-on control as head coach.

Following a fortnight of speculation, Lancaster revealed – as first reported by Sportsmail – he held talks with ex-All Blacks coach Smith in South Africa last week about a long-term role within the national hierarchy.

The Kiwi is pondering whether the offer but admitted yesterday he can see England emerging as a force and the prospect of being involved when they become a threat to his native New Zealand leaves him feeling uneasy.

Offer's open: Wayne Smith is wanted by England boss Stuart Lancaster

Offer's open: Wayne Smith is wanted by England boss Stuart Lancaster

Nevertheless, the assistant coach of Waikato Chiefs is expected to accept, judging by the tone of Lancaster's comments.

He is also confident that Catt will accept an interim post for the tour of South Africa and immediate build-up period.

After Smith suggested that the scope of the job being offered to him was vague, Lancaster attempted to clarify the matter, saying: 'We were keen to get Andy Farrell and he has chosen to stay at Saracens. The next step was to find an Andy Farrell replacement and to me the stand-out candidate was Wayne Smith.

'He's got some decisions to make now. The lure of international rugby is strong for him and he was excited by the vision I presented of where the national team is going. I talked to him about the history – the journey from the last World Cup to the end of the Six Nations and he said that reminded him of the situation the All Blacks were in 2004.

'We have offered Wayne the same role Andy did. Wayne is defence coach for Waikato Chiefs but he can also coach attack and he will be coaching attack (if he joins England). He's got a lot of experience, a southern hemisphere background and he's been to World Cups.'

Back in the fold: World Cup-winner Mike Catt could return to the England set-up

Back in the fold: World Cup-winner Mike Catt could return to the England set-up

Just to re-assert his own desire to maintain direct working contact with the players, Lancaster added: 'I will keep the role as head coach and the job is to work with the commercial team, media, directors of rugby in the Premiership, the RFU, but it is a coaching role too.

'I will set the framework of how we play and the coaches will work on the detail. It's a team – myself as head coach, Graham Rowntree as forwards coach and Wayne would be backs coach.'

Alex King of Clermont Auvergne was considered as a short-term coaching option for the South Africa tour, but instead Lancaster has lined up Catt, who is poised to leave London Irish.

It is almost certain that an agreement will be reached and the main coaching team of Lancaster, Rowntree and Catt will be supplemented by two temporary in-house RFU appointments – Jon Callard and Simon Hardy.

Rebuilding: Lancaster is in the process of revamping his England coaching team

Rebuilding: Lancaster is in the process of revamping his England coaching team

Smith outlined his thinking about the England offer by saying: 'I've got major considerations to make over the next 10 days. Family is a big one. The Chiefs are a major consideration and the third one is having put the last eight years of my life into coaching the All Blacks and trying to win a World Cup.

'I'm going to have to search inside myself to see whether I could coach a team against them – particularly a team that has a coach in Stuart Lancaster who has real clarity of vision. He's going to turn them into a force so it's going to a team that over time will potentially challenge the All Blacks, so I've got to be clear in my mind that I could be a part of that.'

Referring to Lancaster, Smith added: 'He's very humble and he knows what needs to be done because it's not just about coaching the players, it's aligning all your provincial coaches and club coaches. That will be his major role. He wants on-field coaches. He will be in charge of strategy and alignment.'

Wasps could qualify for the Heineken Cup if they can stave off relegation and administration. Dai Young's side will make the cut for Europe's premier tournament if Clermont or Edinburgh go on to win the title this year, as Wasps will be the highest-ranked non-French club not to have already qualified.

Fabio Capello hints at TV pundit plans after Euro 2012

Capello ponders pundit role back in Italy after leading England at Euro 2012

Fabio Capello has revealed he will wait until after Euro 2012 before deciding whether to return to Italy… as a TV commentator.

The Italian is set to stand down as England manager after the European Championships in Poland and Ukraine this summer and has been linked with several posts on the Continent.

Talking a good game: Fabio Capello accepts his special critics' award at Italy's annual football awards ceremony in Milan

Talking a good game: Fabio Capello accepts his special critics' award at Italy's annual football awards ceremony in Milan

The 65-year-old former AC Milan and Real Madrid manager was presented with a special critics' award at the annual Oscar del Calcio awards ceremony in Milan – which rewards the best player, coach, club and referee in the previous Serie A season.

Holding on: England boss Capello is unsure over his future

Holding on: England boss Capello is unsure over his future

Last month Capello insisted he wished to remain with England until the end of their Euro 2012 campaign but on Monday night he did not reveal what he expects to do following the tournament.

'Before taking a decision we wait for the end of the European Championship,' he said.

'Then let's see if I go back to Italy, as a TV commentator or as a coach.'

He added: 'I am well in England, I am fine, but the Italian anthem is always a strong emotion.'

Looking towards this summer's competition, Capello has labelled Spain as favourites despite England having beaten the World Cup winners in a recent friendly.

Stand by your man: Capello was accompanied by his wife Laura at the ceremony

Stand by your man: Capello was accompanied by his wife Laura at the ceremony

He said: 'We played them in a friendly and they made a great impression on me with incredible possession of the ball.

'Many are looking for an antidote – even (Jose) Mourinho at Real Madrid – but cannot find it.'

Martin O"Neill eyes Asamoah Gyan loan recall from Al Ain

O”Neill ponders loan recall for 5m-a-year Gyan to add Sunderland firepower

Martin O”Neill has opened the door for Asamoah Gyan to return to Sunderland from his world-record 6million loan deal in the United Arab Emirates.

The new Sunderland manager is desperately seeking additional firepower to pull his side away from a Barclays Premier League relegation battle, with the Black Cats suffering this season from the loss of both Gyan and Darren Bent in the last year.

While Bent joined Aston Villa for 24m, Gyan is playing for Al Ain and earning close to a whopping 5m-a-year. But O”Neill may decide bringing Gyan back is cheaper than forking out for a new striker in January.

Payday: Asamoah Gyan (second right) is earning big bucks from Al Ain in the UAE

Payday: Asamoah Gyan (second right) is earning big bucks from Al Ain in the UAE

The Ghana star made an impact playing alongside Bent after joining from Rennes in August 2010, but despite his early promise faded somewhat before his surprise loan move was announced last summer.

But Gyan still appears committed to the Sunderland cause under the new management, with the 26-year-old posting on Twitter last week: “Good luck to our new manager Martin O”Neill.”

Impact: But Gyan faded at Sunderland last term

Impact: But Gyan faded at Sunderland last term

O”Neill”s options up front are somewhat limited due to injuries suffered by Connor Wickham and Fraizer Campbell, while Ji Dong-won and on-loan Nicklas Bendtner have struggled for goals since moving to the Stadium of Light in the summer.

And the Northern Irishman admits is keen to explore the possibility of a return for Gyan.

He said: “Yes, absolutely I will address it. I have to talk to Niall [Quinn, Sunderland director] about exactly where we stand on that. But yes, again, his position will definitely be looked at.

“(Gyan) started off brilliantly, then things tapered away a little bit.

“I don”t know the lad at all. Again, he got off to a great start so the potential is there, but I will have a look at it.”