Cardiff Ravage The Rovers To Stay Top

A wintry Friday evening at Ewood Park greeted Cardiff City and their travelling band of 600 supporters, who were along with the nation watching on TV to see The Bluebirds chalk up a stupendous and rare away win to see-off fellow Championship promotion hopefuls Blackburn Rovers.

Cardiff fielded the three Craig’s Conway, Noone and Bellamy in an attack minded team that signaled Malky Mackay’s intent to take the game to Blackburn and send a message out to the chasing pack that The Bluebirds mean business and are not about to settle for anything less than promotion to the promised land.

It was a slow burning game initially with Craig Conway seemingly all over the pitch, first he produced a tracking run and tidy tackle that prevented Blackburn’s Jordan Rhodes from delivering a cross from the right after he had been allowed to run with the ball out wide, minutes later Andrew Taylor’s throw-in found Conway who was felled as he jinked away from his marker.

Craig Bellamy stepped up to take the resulting free kick, but his effort drifted disappointingly high of the back-post. It was to be Blackburn who had the first real chance  at goal, Mauro Formica wrong-footed Mark Hudson five yards outside the Cardiff area, the City captain lunged in with what can best be described as a clumsy challenge. Earning himself a yellow card from referee SimonHooper, Hudson’s fifth of the season meaning an automatic one match ban. City fans shook their heads in disbelief at the moment of madness from Hudson and pondered why the yellow cards are not wiped for Championship players at the end of November. The Cardiff City wall blocked the initial shot from the free-kick itself, then cleared the follow-up effort.

The match was a scrappy, even affair, until City poured forward on the counter-attack. Whittingham freed Don Cowie wide on the right and his deep cross found Craig Conway wide on the left who picked out Andrew Taylor on the overlap; it took two Rovers defenders to prevent Craig Noone from turning the cross home at the back-post. It served to spur on The Bluebirds.

On the half-hour mark tempers boiled over, several players were involved in a spot of handbagging in the centre-circle resulting in young Blackburn defender Jason Lowe being booked following his petulant reaction to his clash with Craig Bellamy. Cardiff wasted no time working the ball to right, where Noone who picked out Mark Hudson as he darted in-front of his marker Scott Dann and guided a header down and past the hopeless Blackburn ‘keeper Paul Robinson.

Minutes later a similar move very nearly doubled City’s lead. Craig Conway, playing with confidence on the Cardiff left, looked to have lost possession whilst trying to turn away from two defenders, but somehow he not only recovered his feet, but also stole the ball back flashing in across which was tantalisingly just centimetres away from making contact with Heidar Helguson’s head at the back-post.

Cardiff were now in control and running the show, twice they came just inches away from doubling their advantage before the break, Craig Noone was the catalyst on both occasions.

Half-time and Blackburn needing to change it up made a substitution: Colin Kazim-Richards replaced Markus Olsson. It seemed to work at the restart, Joshua King, blazed a decent chance high into the stands, before the on-loan Manchester United striker raced onto a ball in the left of the box before calmly slotting the ball past David Marshall to pull Blackburn level.

The home side invigorated poured on the pressure and Cardiff City could have found themselves behind as Colin Kazim-Richards powerful shot was deflected narrowly wide and Rovers bombarded the City box with a series of corners. Cardiff were staunch in their defence though and rode out the storm.

The Bluebirds retook the lead via local hero Craig Bellamy, who had enjoyed a fine spell as a Blackburn player and who had been greeted very warmly by the Blackburn supporters, but he was to be the catalyst in what followed which was to break many of their hearts.

Bellers picked up the ball on the edge of the area, played a one-two with Heider Helguson and taking the return pass onto his left, he jinked outside a defender, before firing back across Paul Robinson into the back of the net, to mass celebration from City players and supporters alike.

David Marshall then produced a stupendous save he had to readjust in mid-air after Jordan Rhodes’ shot was deflected, Rhodes was alert to the rebound though, he squared the ball to Formica at the back-post who crashed his effort off the bar it was to be his last contribution to the game as he was taken off and replaced by Fabio Nunes, Cardiff City also made a substitution: Kim Bo-Kyung on for Craig Noone,.

Jordan Rhodes who had looked alert all evening sparked a contentious moment midway through the second-half as he and Hudson tangled on the edge of the Cardiff area and Rhodes threw himself to the floor, replays later showed Hudson had made contact, but outside the box and that Rhodes had withstood that contact taken the ball on, but lost control before pulling off a dive that would have been worthy of Tom Daley!

Referee Simon Hooper was less impressed though and quickly waved away all Blackburn protestations much to The Bluebirds relief.

Blackburn continued to look dangerous going forward, and the game looked far from safe for the Bluebirds until Cardiff hit them on the break for a decisive third.

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Joe Mason, fresh and eager, took a Heidar Helguson flick-on , he wrong-footed his marker and to bore down on former England keeper Paul Robinson, one-on-one, the youngster calmly, simply and sweetly slid the ball home.

Just a minute later and the City faithful were delirious. A loose pass in midfield was pounced on by Kim Bo-Kyung who broke away, he played a neat one-two with Helguson on the left, before finishing clinically across Robinson.

Faithful Rovers supporters who had started to leave as the third goal went in started to pour out disgruntled, several launched their scarves angrily onto the pitch. These were elderly gentlemen and young female supporters it as to be noted normally the cornerstone of level-headed support at games, not petulant youths or the remnants of the old firm that still posture at the back of stands reliving their youth. A fact which was shocking and borne out by one man looking for all the world like everyone’s favourite grandfather, who was to be repeatedly shown launching his scarf furiously onto the pitch, well into the wee small hours on the news channels, a damming indictment of the modern game that fans are pushed to the point of breaking thanks to owners meddling with history, tradition and the very fabric of their team.

In the dying minutes of the game Rudy Gestede replaced Heidar Helguson, but all eyes were on the clock the final whistle blew Cardiff City were four points clear at the top going into the Christmas period. It felt great to be a Bluebird!

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Why Scunthorpe fans must remain united to the cause

Last season was one of doom and gloom for Iron fans as Scunthorpe United only just managed to consolidate in League One.

I gave manager Alan Knill the benefit of the doubt, as he needed time to stamp his own mark on the club. He also had a disproportional squad, some of the players’ wages was deemed far too much for the small budget the club possesses.

Fast forward this season, in a summer of upheaval and new acquisitions to the side, I believed this season would be a more positive one. How wrong could I be?

The worst start to a season since 1966, Scunthorpe United were beaten once again last Saturday, losing 2-0 away at Hartlepool United. Played 4 lost 4, a goal difference of -10 and anchored to the foot of the League One table.

The season is still very young, and it would be pressing the panic button if Alan Knill was to be sacked so prematurely into the new campaign. But Knill has to justify the events that unfolded on the final day of the August transfer window.

Bobby Grant was sold to Rochdale for an undisclosed fee. The striker was a regular in the claret and blues starting XI. Despite finishing top goal-scorer for the club with 12 goals last season, the Liverpudlian struggled to build a rapport with the Iron fans, last season he was farmed out on loan to Accrington Stanley.

The start of this season appeared to be a revitalised Bobby Grant. Scorer of two goals in the historic 5-5 draw with Derby County, which ended with the Iron triumphing on penalties. However, in the 4-0 home defeat to Yeovil Town, Grant’s lacklustre display saw him substituted, cue cheers from the Scunthorpe fans, he showed his frustration by shaking his head as he trudged off the pitch.

Alan Knill said the fans reaction had a massive influence in Grant deciding his time had come to leave Glanford Park. The news of his transfer was announced lunchtime on deadline day. Many Iron fans began predicting which striker would be replacing Grant on a permanent or loan deal. Some fans began dreaming of previous loan star Ramon Nunez returning. As it turned out, the Iron fans were rewarded with nobody.

This sparked anger amongst the fans before the Hartlepool result. The question is did Knill allow Grant to leave thinking that he could bring in another striker on deadline day? One thing is for sure, the majority of Scunthorpe fans are voting on their feet, attendances are sinking rapidly, the voices calling the sack of Alan Knill continue to get louder and louder.

Knill had a difficult job on his hands as it is operating on a shoestring budget at the Iron. However he did the same at Bury and laid the foundations for The Shakers to get promoted to League One, before leaving for Glanford Park in March 2011.

As one of the media assistants at the club, I have to say I do feel for Alan Knill as he strikes me as a true footballing man who wants the best for the supporters and the club.   The style of football that Knill has got the players doing is pleasing on the eye as they try and replicate Barcelona’s ‘ticki taka’ football. However, Scunthorpe have not been clinical enough with the ball.

Chairman Steve Wharton has publicly said he is searching for someone to take over the reins as an investor for the club. Gainsborough Trinity Chairman Pete Swann has announced he is stepping down at the end of this season, maybe he could be the new man that will inject some much needed money into the club?

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Next Saturday sees Scunthorpe United back on home soil as they face play-off placed Sheffield United. A win could spark a turnaround in the clubs fortunes, silencing the boo-boys and easing the mounting pressure off Knill. However, a fifth defeat on the bounce could see Alan Knill edge even closer to the exit door.

Many fans will choose to stay away, it is a decision they are entitled to as they spend their hard earned wages on watching their hometown team. But it is important that the fans that still go and watch Scunthorpe United remain loyal through this hard period and get behind the players and the manager. I know it’s a cliché, but with the pitch so close to the turnstiles, the fans really can be a 12th man for the club.

Let me know your thought and follow me on Twitter for even more Scunthorpe debate.

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Reading boss plays down Twitter row

A Twitter outburst by Adam Federici’s girlfriend will not disrupt the dressing room harmony at Reading, according to manager Brian McDermott.

Royals supporters were quick to pick up on comments made on Saturday night after Federici had been told by McDermott that he had been dropped for the 3-1 Premier League defeat to Tottenham Hotspur.

On the social networking site, Micaela Gardner, Federici’s partner wrote: “Football has left me feeling totally numb and empty inside! For once I have NO explanation! #noloyalty #absolutejoke.”

Another of Federici’s friends, Stephanie Gardner, wrote after Sunday’s game: “Reading FC absolute joke of a club unbelievable the way they can treat there [sic] players #lost3-1 tactical decision did not work #badmanagement.”

Reading fans reacted in their droves to the public comments and the two girls were quick to delete their accounts from Twitter on Tuesday. On the surface it makes a mockery of Reading’s ultra-professional approach with supporters fearing unrest in the ranks, but McDermott has told fans that is not the case. The Royals manager spoke to getreading:

“There’s nothing I can do about someone’s Twitter feed. I can’t help what players or their girlfriends put on Twitter – if that’s the case, then it’s a shame.

“The fact of the matter is that I spoke to Adam and made a decision that Alex McCarthy was going to play. No player at the club has a position that means they will play every week – no player.”

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Federici was given a new Royals deal to tie him to the club until 2015 just last month and last summer it was the player himself who upset fans when he declared that he needed to be playing at the highest level for the sake of his Australia career in an interview.

However, current No.1 Alex McCarthy has already been told that he will keep his place for Saturday’s trip to West Bromwich Albion with Federici expected to continue to work on his knee problem over the coming weeks.

Ex-City manager believes Manchester United have winning mentality

Ex-Manchester City manager Peter Reid believes that Manchester United will win their 20th Premier League title this season and it’s down to their ability to win vital games.

United currently sit at the top of the league with a 12 point advantage after beating Everton on Sunday. With just 13 matches to go until the last day of the season, Reid doesn’t believe that any of the clubs will be able to catch the Red Devils and this is due to their ability to win games even when they aren’t playing well.

“Champions win football matches when they are not playing well, Manchester United have done it and Manchester City haven’t and that’s the bottom line. That is why they are 12 points clear and that is the reason I think they will win it,” Reid told The Daily Mail.

The Citizens won the league last year in a memorable season finale when they beat Qpr with a goal scored in injury time. The reigning champions have found it hard to defend their title and their form this season falls short of the effort made last year. Reid believes several factors are to blame for this, one being their early exit from the Champions League.

“In the Champions League they had a hell of a  difficult group but they got three points and for the Premier League champions that is a really poor return,” he added.

“As a result I think confidence and momentum  were lost early on by City as it showed you where they are in the grand scale of things in Europe and that has been borne out in the Premier League.”

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Liverpool v Aston Villa- Match Preview

The managers of both these football clubs entered the doors of sides with rich football heritage following success with newly promoted teams the season before.

They also share common ground in that they have found the expectations difficult to handle with both sides yet to truly hit top gear.

Liverpool have encouragement though to believe that Rodgers’s ideas may be finally getting across with their side looking to win their third match on the bounce on Saturday.

Aston Villa have cause for optimism too, having reached the League cup semi-final midweek and they are starting to collect points to lift them away from the drop zone, slowly but surely.

A trip to Anfield is not exactly a fixture they would have been looking for right now though in their mini revival.

Luis Suarez returns from his one match suspension at West Ham to bolster the Reds. Jose Enrique was taken off in last weekend’s resurgent comeback against the Hammers with a precautionary hamstring injury and should be fit to play, but Downing is expected to start instead. Nuri Sahin could also be set to return to the fold after a spell out. Martin Kelly and Fabio Borini remain away from action for a significant period of time.

Paul Lambert has an ever-growing injury list which will be a concern for the Villa boss. Joe Bennett (knee) missed Tuesday’s Capital One Cup win over Norwich City could feature. Captain Ron Vlaar (calf) and Enda Stevens (ankle) are unlikely to recover after spells on the sidelines.

Darren Bent was forced off at Carrow Road as his manager made the admission that he expect the England international to be out for four weeks.  Dunne and Gardener are still long term absentees.

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If Stewart Downing plays this could be a lucky omen for the Reds with him overdue a goal and his last Premier League goal was in this fixture for Aston Villa against Liverpool.

Prediction: Liverpool 3-0 Aston Villa

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Brendan Rodgers rules out wholesale changes in January

Liverpool manager Brendan Rodgers has ruled out the possibility of making wholesale changes to his squad during the January transfer window.

It has been thought that the Northern Irishman may look to bring in a number of new faces during the winter in a bid to improve the Reds’ Premier League performances.

However, Rodgers confessed that he is unlikely to make multiple transfers, despite worries surrounding the depth of his Anfield squad:

“The reality is that there was always going to be a bit of movement this season with the club trying to regain some of their money. This season was always going to be difficult.” He is quoted by SkySports.

“We’ll look to do something in the January transfer window, though. There’s not going to be wholesale changes in terms of players coming in, that’s the reality of where the club is at.

With the departure of Andy Carroll during the summer, and the recent injury suffered by Fabio Borini, Rodgers has only Luis Suarez to call upon in a central attacking role.

Due to this, he claimed that he’ll be searching for alternatives during the next transfer window:

“We’re looking to do business in the striking department in January,

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“We’re looking to grow over the next six months, we’ll get some reinforcements in January and that will support the group who have been magnificent for me so far.

“Hopefully in the summer we can build again.”

When did Arsene Wenger become so out of touch with the market?

Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger has never been one to hold his opinions back when it comes to the transfer market, unafraid to stray from the pack and think on his own, but his latest idea that clubs should be limited in the future during January to no more than two signings per side is so far outside of the box it literally beggars belief and leads to the question, just when did he become so out of touch?

It’s become increasingly clear that the 63-year-old has some kind of aversion to spending money these days, with the club’s £8million move for Nacho Monreal on deadline day in the wake of Kieran Gibbs’ hamstring injury causing many supporters to hail the move for a player they didn’t really need as some sort of masterstroke, coming as a major surprise to most that the club had signed anyone at all. You see, Wenger is on a crusade when it comes to Financial Fair Play (FFP) in such a zealot-like fashion, that even a modicum of movement is hailed as the dawning of a new era.

Wenger took particular umbrage at the volume of Newcastle’s dealings this month, telling reporters: “I think it should be all completely cut out or limited to two players. It is unfair for the league that some teams who have played for example now Newcastle twice already have an advantage on teams who play Newcastle now they have bought six or seven players. You do not face exactly the same team so I believe the number of players you could buy should be limited.”

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The world according to Wenger is a very interesting place to be and unless you conduct your business by the values that he’s come to adopt in recent years then you are both reckless and irresponsible. Nevertheless, with just 14 Premier League games to go now in the campaign, just how much of an influence does he expect January acquisitions to have on the fate certain sides and the overall feel of the league table? How does it even directly effect him? To call the competition of the market place ‘unfair’ just shows how detached from reality he has become. Would it even be legal to limit freedom of movement in such a fashion?

Of course, this is not the first time that Wenger has gone off at the deep end over finances this month, when faced with questions on Theo Walcott’s future on January 5th at a press conference when discussing the topic of the club’s wage structure: “We pay well. We pay very well. I’ve spent all my life making sure people who work for us are paid well and I believe if you can do it, you do it, to pay something that makes sense and is defendable in front of every single player.

“We make exceptions sometimes but they are not maybe so high. If you want to keep making profit you have to respect that. We have no players on £200,000 a week and I think other clubs will come down to us with financial fair play. We have a more socialist model.”

Only at Arsenal, currently a club with the fourth-highest wage bill in the entire country, the most expensive average ticket price for fans, and where Walcott earned a £40k-a-week wage hike for dragging his heels, would Wenger call their wage structure a ‘socialist model’. It’s like a Peter Sellers movie; the deluded man at the helm spiralling out of control due to his own insistence that his is the right course of action. This stubborn stance in the face of an undeniable reality and an acceptance of where the game is at, is what has seen the club in irreversible decline under his stewardship in recent years. The real draining force on the Premier League is wages, not transfer fees.

His close alignment with the board has caused problems in the past and it will continue to do so in the future. The club are gambling on their future but in a completely different way to some of the richer clubs in Europe. However, you could argue that it’s just as reckless, by placing all of their eggs in one basket regarding FFP being enforced strictly by Uefa. Many see it as simply the latest step to ensure the status quo is kept at the top, with ambitious smaller clubs prevented from joining the cabal of the elite and spending their way to the top, while the sheer volume of ways at getting around the rules is sure to cause problems further down the line.

Try telling QPR, Fulham, West Ham or Reading fans that what their club have done this month constitutes being ‘unfair’. The January transfer window offers the last chance for many to ensure their top flight status for another year and putting a limit on comings and goings would rob them of the chance to be competitive and address the gaps in their squads. The poorer teams in the division simply wouldn’t stand a chance of turning their fortunes around, punished for not quite getting it right first time around in the summer. Now that would be unfair.

It’s notable that many of the teams above Arsenal in the league did very little in January despite possessing the budgets to adjust their apparent failings. Manchester City signed one youngster, Manchester United clinched a deal for Wilfried Zaha and then immediately loaned him back to Crystal Palace in the Championship for the rest of the season, Chelsea signed just one player, Demba Ba, while Tottenham signed two players for a grand total of £4.5m, with Everton bringing in Barnsley youngster John Stones for £3m. Ironically, Arsenal were the only club to spend upwards of £8m on any one player set to have an impact in the top six for the rest of the season, should we put a limit on how much a club can spend now too?

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The bean counters have been in control at Arsenal for quite some time now, which has just so happened to have coincided with the club falling from the pinnacle of the English game and struggling to make the top four. Arsene Wenger is a man with a wealth of experience in the game but his recent memory is tainted by seeing star players leave for bigger clubs in the pursuit of silverware year after year and his idea is merely a sign of a man trying to make sense of his lack of control and the chaos around him.

Punishing smaller clubs in the name of fairness is not a logical or rational plan by any stretch of the imagination and the self-proclaimed Socialist manager couldn’t have got it more wrong this time around.

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Ferguson wants European glory

Manchester United manager Sir Alex Ferguson is aiming to secure at least one more Champions League trophy before he retires.

The Old Trafford boss has only won the competition twice in his 26 years in charge, reaching a two further finals.

But the Scotsman believes that his squad have enough capability to challenge Spanish giants Real Madrid and Barcelona in the latter stages of the competition this season.

Ferguson turns 71 at the end of this year and is aware that he won’t have too many European campaigns left, reiterating that securing the European hatrick is amongst his top priorities.

Sir Alex secured titles in both 1999 and 2008 and feels it is not out of the club’s grasp to add 2013 to the list.

Ferguson went on to tell the Manchester Evening News: “I think in terms of the history of our club, we should have one more and I want to win it again and get into the bracket of winners like Liverpool, our biggest rivals, Bayern Munich and Ajax.

“I think AC Milan and Real Madrid have got separated from the rest of the bunch but that definitely drives me on a bit.”

United’s manager also reflected on the club’s positive form in Europe, which has been in stark contrast to last season.

“We were careless and this year we made sure we were going to qualify and so far we have done well,” he added.

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In the process of securing their fourth straight victory in the Champions League this season, Manchester United ensured qualification for the last 16 knockout stages.

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Does Sir Alex Ferguson simply need one more?

If you can’t earn a statue after 26 years of managerial service to a football club, then when can you? Indeed, as Manchester United immortalized the achievements of Sir Alex Ferguson’s reign this past week, it’s offered English football a timely reminder, if one possible even needed it, of the Scot’s unworldly achievements over the past quarter century and counting.

12 league titles, five FA Cups, two Champions League victory’s, one Cup Winner’s Cup, three doubles and a treble. It is a trophy haul that needs no words and his legacy upon the game is one that needs no introduction. Ferguson earned his place amongst the pantheon of greats long ago and with every passing season; he is seemingly only galvanizing himself as one of the greatest managers of all time.

Although as the 70-year-old enters what must surely now be the autumn of his long, distinguished and glorious managerial career, is there one last dragon yet to be slayed?

It might seem macabre to start talking about epitaphs, but if you were to conjure one up for Fergie, the knocking of Liverpool off their perch, would be amongst the hot picks. Having masterminded 12 of United’s 19 league triumph’s, the Scot has done his part in overhauling the 18 that the old enemy in Liverpool bestow.

But although Ferguson has certainly done all he could and so much more, to knock the Liver Bird off its domestic perch, it’s still crowing loud and proud upon it’s European one. Manchester United have of course won the European Cup three times, compared to the five triumphs of Liverpool in the continent.

It’s an emotive statistic that will never fail to catalyze the most fervent of debate. Some will suggest that winning in Europe was an easier feat in the 1970’s than it was within today’s footballing climate.

Others will retort that under the old European Cup regulations, United wouldn’t have been playing in Europe the year they famously beat Bayern Munich 2-1 to lift it in Barcelona (they finished runners up in the league the season previous – not enough to grant you European competition in the 1970’s).

But regardless of how both sets of supporters frame it, for Ferguson, it is something that eats away at him.

Speaking after United’s 3-1 away win at Braga earlier this month, Ferguson suggested that the club’s stature demanded more European titles:

“I think in terms of history of our clubs, we should have one more and I want to win it again and get into the bracket of winners like Liverpool, our biggest rivals, Bayern Munich and Ajax,” he said.

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Although it was his personal sentiments, which felt even more poignant, when reflecting upon United’s fortuned in Europe under his tenure.

“That definitely drives me on a bit [winning another European Cup].

“I get really frustrated when I think about the opportunities we have had to win it, but you can’t be greedy you look at my career and I have won two European Cup and Cup Winners’ Cup and I am proud of that.”

Perhaps it is testament to his staggering achievements within the game, that we should be talking about Ferguson ‘only’ lifting two European Cup’s. Furthermore, if anything, you can make a case that the gap between his 1999 and 2008 triumph, does in fact strengthen his legacy. Rebuilding and cultivating a new team, only to take them to the pinnacle of European club glory as he did with his 1999 set of players, is a remarkable feat.

Although you can’t escape the feeling that, as Ferguson said himself, given the opportunities both he and his team have had to lift the trophy, his European Cup tally still stands at just the two.

Manchester United did of course rack up three Champions League final appearances in four seasons within recent times and let’s not forget how close that team was to entering the real pantheon of greats.

Following their 2008 triumph in Moscow, had they come out on top in Rome against Barcelona, they would have become the first team of the Champions League era to rack up back to back titles – a feat achieved by a very select few, including the great Real Madrid team of the 50’s, the Ajax team of the early 70’s and of course, Liverpool, in ’77 and ’78, amongst others. But they didn’t. Pep Guardiola’s Barcelona dismantled Ferguson’s side not once, but twice in recent European finals, extending the Scot’s search for a third continental triumph.

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Because while Ferguson is already one of the managerial greats, that elusive third European Cup, would potentially propel him into the realms of indisputability.

Would a third win arguably make Ferguson peerless within managerial history? Symbolically, it would place him alongside Liverpool’s Bob Paisley within the European trophy list, not behind him. There is nowhere else to go past there.

No manager would have won more European Cups or reached as many European finals as Ferguson. He’s already the most successful British manager in history with 48 titles. Winning a third European title wouldn’t take a question mark away from his legacy; such a thing doesn’t exist. But it would add a hell of a lot more than just a bit of added gloss. It would make him untouchable.

Some may suggest that Ferguson’s failure to produce a back-to-back European Cup winning side, a la Paisley and Brian Clough, may put a slight dent in his continental standing. But no team has done that since Arrigo Sacchi’s Milan side over 22 years ago. It’s a feat that’s evaded a Barcelona team described as one of the greatest club sides of all time. While you shouldn’t compare eras, should Ferguson win a third European Cup, it would in no way be superseded by Paisley’s trio on the basis of timing.

That is of course an argument that for the moment, remains purely hypothetical. Sir Alex Ferguson’s achievements within the game may never be matched and even if he doesn’t win another European Cup, his legacy remains as powerful as anything we have ever seen. Yet if he did, that legacy suddenly takes on a whole life of its own.

Goalkeeper still not number 1

Hugo Lloris made his Premier League debut for Tottenham at the weekend, ending Brad Friedel’s 310 consecutive games in the starting XI.

The French keeper managed to secure Spurs’ first clean sheet of the season, but was still told by coach Andre Villas-Boas that he will not be the permanent first choice.

The Les Blue’s captain impressed White Hart Lane fans with his anticipation and impressive saves during the 2-0 win against Aston Villa. However he gave Villa a great chance, giving the ball away recklessly, but Christian Benteke couldn’t capitalise.

After the game Villas-Boas indicated that he still had a decision to make on who will be between the sticks for their next clash.

“We decided it would be logical to play Hugo to get him acquainted with the Premier League,” he told the Telegraph.

“Nothing tipped the balance. We are fortunate that we can do this rotation. Brad was disappointed but accepted it as a good professional. We respect his performances. He will be back as soon as possible,” the coach added.

FootballFanCast General Stay ahead in the world of football analysis, commentary, and fan insights with FootballFancast. FootballFanCast General Stay ahead in the world of football analysis, commentary, and fan insights with FootballFancast.


By subscribing, you agree to receive newsletter and marketing emails, and accept Valnet’s Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. You can unsubscribe anytime.

Lloris joined Spurs on the last day of the transfer window for a fee of £12 million, and his first Premier League inclusion meant that 41-year-old Friedel sat on the bench for the first time since the 2003-04 season.

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