This week, Ole Gunnar Solskjaer announced that he will be ending his 14 year association with Manchester United and returning to manage his former club Molde. Over the years Solskjaer has provided Manchester United with some amazing memories, none more so than his winner in the Champions League final in 1999. Solskjaer, as a player and coach is adored by the Manchester United fans and it will be sad to see the Norwegian leave. However, the striker has left Manchester United with some great memories, and below is a selection of them.
v Bayern Munich, Champions League final, Barcelona 26/05/99
What more needs to be said?
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Continue to PAGE TWO for more Magic Solskjaer Moments…
v Liverpool, FA Cup, 24/01/99
A goal that kept the treble dream alive. Manchester United were trailing to Liverpool before an equaliser, and up stepped Solskjaer with nerves of steel to win the game and send Manchester United through. He wrong footed David James and nestled a 12 yard strike inside the near post. If United had lost that day, the season could have looked a lot different for United and Solskjaer.
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Continue to PAGE THREE for more Magic Solskjaer Moments…
v Nottingham Forrest, Premiership, 06/02/99
Ole Gunnar Solskjaer scored four goals inside 10 minutes at the City Ground. United had raced into a 4-1 lead against a diabolical Nottingham Forest side. Both Andy Cole and Dwight Yorke had scored two each but it was Solskjaer, from the bench, who was to grab a hat trick. The definitive super sub had just super sized the accepted parameters of his trade, and no cause would ever be lost again.
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Continue to PAGE FOUR for more Magic Solskjaer Moments…
v Charlton, Premiership, 23/08/06
The Norwegian knew that his playing time at Old Trafford was coming to an end due to persistent injuries. This was his last goal for Manchester United, and who could deny that he deserved his wish of one more. He saluted the Manchester United support, and in kind they saluted him back. Through three years of injury misery, he was motivated by scoring another goal for Manchester United – a true Manchester United legend.
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Continue to PAGE FIVE for more Magic Solskjaer Moments…
v Newcastle, Premiership, 18/04/98
Manchester United had lost ground in the title race and were looking to be loosing their grip on the Premier League title. Manchester United threw everyone forward for a late corner, but Newcastle in the shape of Rob Lee broke and was clear on goal. In an act of pure selflessness, Solskjaer chased Lee down – despite being 10 yards behind him. He hacked the midfielder down, and was shown the red card but it showed in an age of rampant egotism there were selfless footballers who would do their all to prevent a defeat. Maybe not his finest moment, but this act – or Manchester United fans at least – showed his commitment to the cause.
After watching the limpest of limp performances from Gerard Houllier’s charges at Anfield this Monday, and with the challenges that lay ahead for the club’s new manager piling up by the fixture, it’s difficult to see anything but mid-table obscurity lying ahead for the second city club, after a revival of sorts under previous manager Martin O’Neill.
It may sound odd referring to Villa as a mid-table side, and to be honest, their league positions never really reflected this, but rather crudely, and don’t worry, I’m fully aware of the selectivity of the statistics that I’ve chosen here, prior to O’Neill’s arrival at the club in August 2006 in time for the start of the 2006/7 season and starting at the start of the Millennium, in the 7 proceeding seasons, Villa finished 6th, 8th, 8th, 16th, 6th, 10th and 16th respectively, which give out an average of 10th. In short, about as mid-table as you can get.
The obstacles in front of the club are numerous but not insurmountable, yet with the club’s chairman Randy Lerner withdrawing funds on a huge scale after the mixed results of the relatively free spending era of O’Neill; coupled with the fact that new manager Houllier has inherited a fairly inexperienced and youthful squad with a seeming lack of firepower and the signs are ominous for the immediate future at least.
Villa’s youngsters, Marc Albrighton, Ciaran Clark, Barry Bannan and Jonathan Hogg as well as Nathan Delfouneso do point to a promising future for the club if they all continue their current career ascents, but for the time being, youth provides the backbone of this Villa squad and for a side with ambitions of challenging for a European spot, that is a risky strategy to take.
With inexperience comes inconsistency, and this current Villa side, while not quite displaying the Jekyll and Hyde nature that made Wigan such a confusing side to pinpoint last season, the difference from one performance to the next is noticeable and was very much on display in their aforementioned defeat to Liverpool.
The club currently lie in 16th place, just 2 points above the relegation zone and while their season isn’t doomed just yet to one of an unexpected dogfight at the bottom, with the league unusually tight, a decent festive period could easily see them just outside the top 6 once more, yet it’s not hard to see where they have gone wrong this term.
Houllier stated yesterday that “At the back we need a bit of both – a change of fortune and of form. We’ve conceded 11 goals in four games. It’s not good enough for a team of our standard. We have to get into the games with the idea of keeping a clean sheet because when you keep a clean sheet you give yourself a chance to win.”
Last season Villa were built upon the foundations of a fantastic partnership between James Collins and Richard Dunne at centre half, ably supported by messrs Friedel, Warnock, Cueller and Luke Young. They conceded just 39 goals, the fourth fewest in the league, kept 15 clean sheets, the fourth best in the league and were generally a hard nut to crack all round. This season, however, they have kept just four clean sheets, and have conceded 27 goals already in just 16 league fixtures, fittingly it seems, the fourth worst in the league. It’s clear that the problems that are undermining their league campaign lie predominantly at the back.
This has manifested itself in some very poor away form, not quite of Fulhamesque proportions just yet, but enough for it to be an issue that needs addressing with the club now a soft touch away from Villa Park. They have accrued just four points on their travels in 8 games this season, and have a quite frankly shocking goal difference of -13, not helped by their 6-0 drubbing at the hands of an Andy Carroll inspired Newcastle side.
While things may be going badly at the back, it’s far from a picnic going forward either. Houllier admits Villa also have to improve at the other end of the pitch in terms of converting chances stating: “I won’t tell you what I put our defensive problems down to. I think it is collective really. We need to be better. We obviously need to eradicate some stupid, schoolboy errors at the back which cost goals. But we also need to improve in the final third and we need to be more clinical. We are improving in terms of our passing, movement and preparation although there are some areas where we have to keep improving. We need more of a cutting edge and to be more clinical at times.”
It’s fair to say that Houllier doesn’t have the greatest of attacking options at his disposal. Agbonlahor has been injury prone so far this term, Emile Heskey, for all his strengths, is not a goalscorer and John Carew is agitating for a move away once more. Of course, Agbonlahor and Carew have combined to decent effect in the past and under O’Neill, Villa were hardly a free-flowing outfit but they always had the ability to excite on occasion and in Ashley Young, they truly have one of the league’s most dynamic players capable of winning a game on his own sometimes. 16 league games thus far have rendered just 17 goals, with just 5 coming away from home.
It’s clear that reinforcements are needed up top. At the back, as Houllier correctly states, it is simply down to individual errors and a lack of form, but the Villa back line is a good defence on the whole and they’ll come good eventually, whereas up top, the experience and goals just simply aren’t there. Of course, it doesn’t help that summer signing Stephen Ireland has failed to shine and has topped, rather prematurely if you ask me, flop of the season lists everywhere, but the rumours linking the club with a move for the likes of Robbie Keane and Michael Owen are understandable, they need a predatory type finisher. Pure and simple.
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Whether Houllier will be given the money to invest that he so evidently needs is another issue entirely though, and a main source of contention between chairman Lerner and previous manager O’Neill. O’Neill wasted an awful lot of money at Villa, but he did unearth the occasional bargain or value for money deal. Houllier had a similar record at Liverpool, for every Diouf there was a Hyypia, for every McAllister a Sean Dundee, but on the whole, he was fairly successful in the transfer market for Liverpool and while the football was dour, results were good and led to a treble of sorts in 2001.
The league this season is in a constant state of flux, but Villa’s recent form, with four defeats in their last five games, is a prime example of a club heading in the wrong direction and they need to arrest the slide. Following up on O’Neill’s three consecutive 6th place finishes was always going to be an unrealistic target this season given the lack of investment, but a top 8 finish should certainly be achievable with a few tweaks and a tightening up at the back.
As I conceded earlier, the league is ridiculously tight, so much so that Bolton are in a lofty 6th place despite only winning five league fixtures this term, and while anyone truly can beat anyone this season in the league, with poor away form, lack of firepower, a faltering defence and a chairman tightening the purse strings, these truly are testing times for Aston Villa as they try to avoid slipping back into a mid-table club after their seasons in the sun.
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Manchester United extended their lead at the top of the Premier League courtesy of a wonder goal by Nani that sealed a 2-1 win. Elsewhere Birmingham eased the pressure at the bottom of the table with a last gasp win; while Mark Hughes will be delighted to see Fulham record their biggest win of the season at Craven Cottage.
In the papers this morning there was a mixed bag of stories including Toure playing down Ade bust-up; Ancelotti concedes he is lucky to avoid the boot; while Sir Alex Ferguson warns the rest of the Premier League that United will only improve.
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Pires – Houllier feeling heat – Sky Sports
Arsene: I’m a fan of spending cap – Sun
Toure plays down Ade bust-up – Sky Sports
Manchester United target Inter Milan goalkeeper Julio Cesar – IMScouting
United will improve, warns Ferguson – Guardian
It ain’t scarf hot as Av wraps up – Sun
I won’t quit cash-strapped Everton – Moyes – Mirror
Spurs cool on Beckham loan move – Guardian
Don’t expect Tev or Cesc to stay – Sun
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Roberto Mancini’s men bounced back from their disappointing home defeat against Everton earlier in the week in the perfect way with three points away at Newcastle. If Manchester City were slow out of the blocks at Eastlands against the Toffees the exact opposite was the case at St James’ Park today as they stormed into a 2-0 lead within the first five minutes.
Manchester City were clinical in the opening exchanges as first Gareth Barry and then Carlos Tevez found the back of the net. The latter was in particularly good form, netting again late on and making the three points completely safe after Newcastle had threatened a comeback through Andy Carroll’s header. The win takes Manchester City up to second in the Premier League table behind United, and keeping them firmly in the title race.
So what five things did we learn about Man City today?
I know every man and his dog has had something to say on the whole Olympic legacy and which football club is deserving of the keys to the Stratford stadium; so I figured I would continue to throw a few more column inches to the debate. What concerns me is not which club ends up moving into the new arena; but more the shameless way in which the respective club owners have gone about their business without any consultation with the very people that make their football club’s tick – the fans.
I know it is nothing new; hey club owners have been dictating to the fans for years, but surely when it comes to moving stadiums a little communication with the supporters who will be filling it should have been forthcoming, shouldn’t it? I mean how many Tottenham and West Ham fans really know the ins and outs of their club’s respective bids? It seems to me that it is Fleet Street that has dragged out the intentions of the two football clubs, rather than a direct and straight forward dialogue from the respective owners in the past few weeks. Daniel Levy did write an open letter to the club supporters after the application deadline had passed on Friday; however I couldn’t help but feel that it was too little, too late.
I was debating the whole Tottenham move to Stratford with supporters before yesterday’s game at St James’s and many agreed that they have been left in the dark. Unfortunately a lack of communication had meant supporters had to decipher what they could from the little bits of information within the media of the club’s intentions, without being presented with the full facts. Surely a little courtesy to the people who religiously pay out anything between £600-1200 on a season ticket every year, on top of endless pounds spent on away trips and merchandise, deserved to know the club’s intentions with their bid for the Olympic stadium, given they were so open with supporters with regards to the Northumberland Development Scheme. It is the supporters after all that are going to see their natural landscape being dragged from under their feet should a move to Stratford be successful.
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As a Tottenham fan myself I would be desperately sad to see the club move away from N17. I am not naive to the fact that the club needs to move to a bigger stadium in order to compete financially with the big boys in Europe, and if a move to Stratford is the only genuine option we have to achieve this then so be it, but I stress again it would have been nice for supporters to be consulted about our club’s intentions, before filling our heads with grand plans for this NEW Northumberland Park development. We deserved that much, didn’t we?
Roman Pavlyuchenko has issued an ultimatum to Harry Redknapp, saying that if he does not start more games he will ask to leave the club. He said, “I am tired of being treated like this. Now, until the summer transfer window, if nothing changes, I am going to demand to be sold.” Adding, “It is not the money I am after. I want to play football.”
You can see why the Russian is frustrated, he has scored more goals than Peter Crouch and Jermain Defoe put together this season, and not played as long as either of them. Last year he found himself in a similar position, being 4th choice striker behind Robbie Keane, as well as the current pairing. But while many people are easily swayed by Pavlyuchenko’s seemingly romantic desire to simply ‘play football’; I am a bit more sceptical.
He is no stranger from rhetoric, having played a successful part in political campaigns in Russia. He has acted as a deputy for Vladimir Putin’s “United Russia” party. In his home town of Stavropol, Pavlyuchenko secured more than enough votes to be elected onto the regional council.
The line; ‘It is not the money I am after’ is so obvious. We can’t fall for it that easily, especially when he will never have to worry about money. He gets paid more in a week than an average man would get paid in a year.
The truth is that he has always been a big fish in a small pond, and he can’t handle being a smaller fish. With his youthful looks and blonde hair it is easy to see why he has previously been the ‘it’ boy. He was ‘golden’ in his six years at Spartak Moscow, and when he joined Tottenham his affectionate mother, Lyubov Pavlyuchenko, said, “He didn’t want to go to England or leave Russia.”
Now don’t get me wrong, I am not just being a cynic. I am a huge believer in wanting to play football first, and receive the ridiculous rewards, second. But this desire should surely be mirrored by an attitude on the pitch?
Pav’s problem is that he has not proved himself as reliable. Yes, he scores goals, but not enough to convince Redknapp he is better than those above him. He takes them well when they arise, but does not do enough when these chances don’t crop up.
Some of his goals have been top class, but he all too often looks lazy. Redknapp said that his best from came last year after being told to “just f******g run around”. He is definitely talented but has not produced the goods when he been in the starting XI. His best performances have come from the bench.
When the going gets tough, you have to stay and fight for it, not just give up. If anyone has seen Pavlyuchenko play, it is tough to argue that he is not lazy. If he carries out his decision to quit White Hart Lane, it will mirror his attitude on the pitch, a bit like a spoiled child.
In his interview, Pavlyuchenko said, “it is absolutely inconceivable why Redknapp keeps me on the bench.” It might be frustrating Roman, but it is by no means ‘absolutely inconceivable’.
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And when he said, “sometimes I have a feeling that Redknapp jeers at me,” he is begging for a response such as, ‘grow up Pav, this is business, nothing personal’. Sport is just that. It seems to me that Roman has been wrapped up in cotton wool his whole life.
So, Harry may not have treated him particularly well, but why should he? He is not baby-sitting, he is a football manager. Pavlyuchenko, as much as I appreciate his sentiments about placing football over money, has often felt sorry for himself while at White Hart Lane, and I think yet again, he has over-reacted.
With ever year that passes at Old Trafford, there is a nagging sense that something has to give. As Sir Alex Ferguson’s class of 1992 one by one clear their lockers for the last time, the end of one era draws inexorably closer and the challenge of building for a new one becomes more and more a pressing concern.
The retirement of Gary Neville, formally confirmed to the football community last week, was another landmark on the ever shortening runway that is Manchester United’s link with its glorious past.
The longevity and professionalism of the remaining stalwarts of that United youth team, Paul Scholes and Ryan Giggs, tricks the mind into suggesting that the era of red success can be forever safeguarded by these two ageless icons.
In truth, this is another transitional season for Ferguson, almost certainly his final effort at leaving his squad in strong shape before he departs Manchester and is carried out on his shield. Previous plans have been modified, particularly by Cristiano Ronaldo and Carlos Tevez’s exits from the Old Trafford dressing room eighteen months ago, the horrendous knee injuries befalling Owen Hargreaves and the difficulty in establishing a successor to Edwin van der Sar.
Despite all of this, a weakened United squad took the league title race to the final day of last season and look set to win the Premiership crown again for the third year in four this time around. There will be no illusions however that the 2011 squad so much as laces the boots of some of its predecessors.
Ferguson has been a tad fortunate this season that United’s early season profligacy was not punished on the domestic scene, however the definition of future successes may well lie in the club’s efforts in Europe, an area that a strong squad is a pre-requisite in.
This is where United may well find themselves falling short. I am not sure, with the squad the Red Devils currently have, that the team is capable of playing at a higher level than the one they have currently scaled. Fans will argue that as of yet Ferguson’s men have not needed to show any more than the quality that led to them going nearly a year without defeat in the league, however there will be challenges in the months ahead on a European front, that will require more than has been in evidence thus far.
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Change in top flight football happens quickly, however the uniqueness of the situation that United find themselves, is that this transitional squad has more than enough to claim the leading domestic prizes. As Chelsea have discovered this season, however, resting on tenuously awarded laurels can and will cause problems – not all Premier League title races are created equal.
Ferguson’s biggest decisions surround the handling of several players to have made a key contribution to previous title triumphs. The retirement of Gary Neville was a case of a player jumping as he was pushed, but the phasing out of Giggs, Scholes and Rio Ferdinand is one of Ferguson’s biggest challenges. The effect the Wayne Rooney saga has had on the Scotsman’s transfer dealings will be fascinating.
Ferdinand has not been the reliable presence he once was, injuries ruling the captain out of several games across the course of the season, his most telling contributions appearing to come from his Twitter account. With the former Leeds and West Ham man increasingly concentrating on outside enterprises, Ferguson has taken the chance to blood Chris Smalling at the heart of defence, and in general the recruit from Fulham has done well. There are no ready made replacements for either Giggs or Scholes, and whilst both players find their weekly contributions over-hyped in the media, it is the gargantuan experience and guidance that the pair bring to the dressing room which will be missed most.
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The medium and long-term outlook for the current squad is difficult to gauge. Several players find themselves out of contract in the summer, a number of which looked destined to start the new season elsewhere. Michael Owen’s hopes of regaining the sharpness that once won him the Ballon D’or have proven futile. Owen Hargreaves cannot possibly be offered a new deal in the summer after not playing a full game in two and a half years and another experienced head, Wes Brown, is facing up to life away from Old Trafford after another year of stunted progress.
The club have been able to call on increasingly impressive performances from the once maligned Dimitar Berbatov and Nani, as the team have made their serene journey to the top of the Premier League table. As spring turns to summer, the key transfer decisions will be some of the most crucial in Ferguson’s tenure at Manchester United.
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Napoli manager Walter Mazzarri has asked his players to narrow their focus as the Serie A season heads toward a thrilling finale.The Naples club slipped from second to third on the table following a 3-0 loss at AC Milan on Monday, and they now trail the league leaders by six points.With second-placed Inter Milan just a point away and Lazio, Udinese and Roma all pushing for a Champions League place, Mazzarri is wary of his squad becoming distracted.”We should only be focused on ourselves and continue to play in the championship as we have done so far,” Mazzarri said.”There is no use in looking at the others.””Mathematics confirms also that teams such as Roma and Juventus can achieve higher positions in the league depending on the results on the pitch.””Events affect the results, therefore anything can happen.”Next up for Napoli is a visit from lowly Brescia, who are mired in a relegation battle after taking just 24 points from 27 fixtures so far this term.But Mazzari has warned of the challenge facing his team on Sunday, and every matchday until the season has concluded.”I totally respect Brescia – they have great skills and players such as (Alessandro) Diamanti and (Andrea) Caracciolo,” he said.”The defenders are also very good, such as (Jonathan) Zebina, and their coaching staff is very good.””It shows the high level that Serie A has reached since there isn’t the gap between the bigger and smaller teams.””I already know it will be tough and I’d like the people to get prepared for it. The matches are going to be difficult, even home matches.””There will be moments when we won’t be able to play as we may want to do since the other teams will stop us from doing so.””We’ll have to suffer, but we should all find the best way in order to win as many matches as possible out of the 11 matches from here until the end of the season.”
Manchester City face an uphill battle to keep their hopes of a European title alive when they host Dynamo Kiev at Eastlands on Thursday.City’s trip to Ukraine for the first leg of their Europa League last-16 tie did not go according to plan, the visitors going down 2-0 and returning to England on the brink of European elimination.City were still in good stead after former Chelsea man Andriy Shevchenko found the opener for the Ukrainian giants, but a poorly conceded second to Oleg Gusev and their subsequent failure to get an away goal could come back to haunt Roberto Mancini’s men.Mancini and his expensively assembled squad need silverware to justify the considerable financial outlay that brought them together.But there still other avenues for the Sky Blues, who are just seven points behind Manchester United in the Premier League title race and face their cross-town rivals at Wembley in an FA Cup semi-final in April.Dynamo, meanwhile, have not lost a match in any competition in over four months, and will fancy their chances of protecting their aggregate against a City side whose goal-scoring has dried up.Argentine ace Carlos Tevez has barely been sighted since his hat-trick against West Bromwich Albion early last month, while temperamental Italian starlet Mario Balotelli seems to have gone cold again and reacted poorly to be substituted off during the trip to Ukraine.Shaun Wright-Phillips, who was recalled to the first team for City’s defeat of Reading in the FA Cup, believes his team can still make it through to the last eight.”If we create one or two chances and we take them, then it’s a whole new ball game,’ Wright-Phillips told the club’s official website.”We know we have to go out there and start firing straight from kick off and create as many chances as possible. You never know what may happen.””It all depends on what tactics the gaffer gives us but we know once we get one chance we have to take it to open the game up a bit more.”Dynamo striker Artem Milevskiy, who has scored five times in the club’s Europa League campaign, has been ruled out with a fractured hand suffered against FC Vorskla Poltava at the weekend.City have no fresh injury concerns.
Kenny Dalglish’s midas touch is paying great dividends at Liverpool and the Reds look a good outside bet for a top four finish this season. It would be a remarkable achievement and more than justify the decision of NESV to part company with Roy Hodgson.
At FFC this week we have seen a mixed bag of Liverpool blogs that includes what to do with Raul Meireles; £58m well spent by Liverpool, while Kenny’s the man to restore the Reds to glory.
We also look at the best Liverpool articles around the web this week.
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The Premier League’s LET DOWN XI
Top TEN Premier League Wags…well I would!
Liverpool braced for a transfer spree?
THREE deals to solve Liverpool’s underlying problem
What to do with Raul Meireles?
THREE deals to solve Liverpool’s underlying problem
Is he really that irreplaceable at Liverpool?
£58m well spent by Liverpool?
Have Liverpool unearthed their own Wilshere?
Why Liverpool could do a lot worse than sign City reject
The man to restore Liverpool to their former glories
Are we set for the biggest summer transfer sprees in years?
*Best of Web*
Summer reconstruction still essential – This Is Anfield
Little Red Shoots of Recovery – Kopblog
The Unwritten Law of Managerial Suitability Tomkins Times
5 Keepers Who Could Be Ready To Step Into Reina’s Shoes? – Live4Liverpool
David N’Gog – Should he stay or should he go? – This Is Anfield
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