How Much Are Football Journalists Needed Nowadays?

It was a worrying week for the football press-pack last week. All their worst fears came true when attempts to update an eight-year old agreement and agree what rights reporters, photographers and the like would have to cover Premiership and Football League matches this season broke down. Disagreements sprung up around the new methods of in-match reporting such as live photos, tweets etc. Thus, no journalists or photographers were allowed into matches to report on proceedings.

Left with no matches to report on, and out of ideas on how to re-spin Cesc Fabregas transfer news, they wrote instead on the horror of not being able to attend matches. Replete with a picture of him looking suitably disgusted, Henry Winter was FORCED to pay £25 to watch Nottingham Forest play, and the sporting world held its breath.

Winter and others (such as Sam Wallace at the Independent), argued that this was bad news for all fans of football. Winter argued that “newspapers, whether in print, online or via Twitter, keep fanning the flames of supporters’ interest in clubs.”

“On Sunday morning they will turn to their newspapers for a neutral’s verdict to find an absence of match reports.

“…the report is part of the match-day experience, fans’ reading up on the game, agreeing or disagreeing. I could spend an hour or more a day dealing with tweets, emails and letters sparked by a report of the previous night’s match.”

Sam Wallace said:

“But without us, and the other members of our dysfunctional press family, who is left? The answer is, the clubs’ own media. I have nothing against the website and TV personnel of our clubs, many of whom started life on our side of the fence and are very capable journalists. But are we sure the clubs are going to strive to give us the real, inside, uncomfortable story on their organisations?”

“…..I fear that my industry is getting elbowed out of the way by certain wealthy clubs who dislike not being in total control. I fear that some of these young men and women may end up in a ghastly PR-version of journalism where their questions are restricted.”

“…..I do not believe any football fan thinks that the clubs’ curtailing of press freedom is something to be celebrated.”

Thankfully a deal was struck just in time for the start of the Premier League, a brand that cannot be damaged at any time, or else the world would shift on its axis.

And this was good news for all concerned. Yes?

As already mentioned, when the ban kicked in it covered the Championship and below. But for fans of non-Premier league teams, the question is this? Was there a huge chasm in your life last weekend, a sense that something was missing, that you weren’t as up-to-date and educated with the goings-on of your football team? Or was it business as usual? Probably the latter.

When I was very young, before the days of Premiership football, live steaming, Super Sundays and message boards, I relied on newspaper match reports. Their words shaped much of how I thought about teams and players. Only when I became a regular attendee did I realised what drivel was being written.

Ok, not drivel – but I realised that people were seeing games very differently to how I was, and the match reports were nothing more than opinion pieces much of the time. Many a time you can watch a match with a friend and see things in a totally different way. Your man of the match is someone your friend thought was terrible. Even with 100 slow-mos and multiple angles you’ll still get wildly different opinions on whether an incident was a penalty, or a red card or a dive.

The most reliable of match reports was often the Football Pink, because it was a match report that simply reported what had happened, rather than trying to crowbar in a particular angle or agenda, and without some sub-editor’s misleading headline. On the downside, it did have a tendency to suddenly end after 67 minutes.

In the modern world of access-all-areas, how much do we need match reports? I never read them as one way or the other I will have seen the match, and so don’t need someone else to summarise it for me, but that’s just a personal choice. Sunday papers are known to sell better during the football season, so it seems their coverage is important to many. You may have seen a match, but when your new signing has scored a hat trick on his debut, you may want to read every match report possible. But if you support a small, lower-league club, there will be little of interest in  antional newspaper anyway.

But Winter’s theory that fans’ interests in their clubs is kept burning brightly by the press is laughable in the extreme. I, like millions of others, have supported my team for decades, and I managed to do it just fine without having to read newspapers to gee me up.

The problem journalists have is that their reputation is besmirched by the minority. Fans have become tired by lies, false rumours, sensationalizing of minor events, and perceived agendas and injustices. This used to be the style of the tabloids alone, but is is depressing how many broadsheet reporters have been reduced to spreading tittle-tattle and speculation. In the world of 24-hour news, there is not enough proper news to go around. When under 20% of transfer rumours turn out to be true, then it is hard to believe anything you read.

According to journalists, Wesley Sneijder has joined Manchester United five times, the first time being over a month ago. He has joined Manchester City twice. He has snubbed City twice too, United have ended their interest three times, terms have been agreed four times, and a fee agreed five times. Nasri signed for Manchester City three weeks ago, but then he was staying at Arsenal, this all coming after United had closed in on his signing, then he has since signed again four times, and the latest news is he will sign again once more later this week (for City).

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Sam Wallace is probably right in saying the recent dispute is fuelled partly by the desire of clubs to have more control on the release of information, and more power in deciding what stays behind closed doors. The new tradition of players to tweet information will only have increased their paranoia. But the newspapers do not help themselves by writing critically of clubs – often it is deserved of course, but it is no surprise trust breaks down with clubs.

And journalists alone do not have access to breaking news. Twitter will break any story instantly, with or without journalists, and will spread malicious rumours in much the same way. The age of instant news has also put great doubt over the newspapers themselves. Exclusives are no longer the domain of the morning paper, as by then most people will already know the story. Add to this that agents and the truthful “in-the-knowers” can keep fans up to date with transfer stories, and that plenty of normal fans have an inside line to clubs, and what are reporters providing that’s unique? What’s more, quality bloggers like the Swiss Ramble have no constraints on space, and no deadlines.

Even Joey Barton, in a week of tweeting Nietzsche, the musings of Wittgenstein and calling Brian Woolnough a nugget, found time to say that the press won’t exist in ten years’ time. Wishful thinking on his behalf, but you can see the logic of his point.

What football journalists do have is contacts and access to areas we normal fans don’t (Old Trafford excepted). They get interviews with players and managers, get briefed on stories and get into press conferences. They have plenty of worth in what they can tell us. With experience comes relationships with those in the game, which bring sinsight and information that might not otherwise be known.

And many write excellently of course, such as Martin Samuel, Daniel Taylor or the financial investigations of David Conn. Quality football “writers” are plentiful (see also Jonathan Wilson). But this is more about the need for reporters rather than writers.

Times have changed, and the way news is reported has entered a new era that has made many old methods redundant. Newspapers have faced difficult times for decades, and the football journalists are no different, as they are no longer the sole bearers of news. Increasingly they know that times have changed, and have looked to branch out, be it appearing on radio shows, podcasts, or nibbling on a croissant on the Sunday Supplement panel. There will always be a role for sports reporting in newspapers in this country, but in future, it may well be less about exclusives and more about fulfilling a much broader media role. The competiiton for them is now huge, but they still have a vital role to play.

At that price you can forgive football clubs for buying elsewhere

Darren Bent’s shock move to Aston Villa from Sunderland for a fee that could cost in the region of £24m in total has highlighted, possibly more than ever before, the ridiculous premium put on English talent with concerns to the over inflated transfer fees that they’re able to command.

Let me get this on record before we begin, I’m a big fan of Darren Bent. I think he should have gone to the World Cup, I rate him higher than current first-choice England striker Jermain Defoe, a player who he is often compared to, in particular by those who reside on White Hart Lane’s terraces, and that for pure goal scoring, there are few better in the whole of Europe. But the fact of the matter is, there is simply no way he is worth £24m.

The initial deal that Villa are paying is constructed in a way that means that they pay £18m up front, a huge outlay and tremendous show of faith on Chairman Randy Lerner’s part to his beleaguered manager Gerard Houllier, and that the deal could eventually rise to as much as £24m depending on appearances and add-ons.

Bent currently has the third best goal scoring record in the Premier League since 2005 with 81 league goals, only fractionally behind Wayne Rooney and Didier Drogba with 82 goals. The fact that anyone can doubt his pedigree is beyond me. He may not be the best all-round striker out there, but he scores goals by the bucket load and lest we forget, that is a striker’s main priority whenever he takes to the pitch.

But the price is simply astronomical. Bent, is, at 26 years of age, approaching his peak years and should he stay at Villa for the rest of his career, the longevity may counterbalance the price, but it’s a huge price tag to live up to. The only reason for the large nature of his fee has to be down to the nationality inked in on his passport.

Everyone knows that English players’ price tags are at a premium, and that’s why foreign managers when they come to England persist with pursuing transfer targets from abroad, because you can quite often get the same player for half the price if you don’t shop around in England.

At Man City for example, David Silva cost £25m, which in today’s market, seems a hugely fair price. Obviously, this was in part due to the financial woe that befell his former club Valencia who became crippled with huge debt. They were also forced to sell off other prized asset David Villa to Barcelona this summer for £34.5m too, to try and ease their financial constraints.

Contrasting Bent’s fee with David Silva’s and it’s clear only one club is getting value for money. Indeed, Man City have also been on the receiving end of paying over the odds for English talent – with the £26m forked out for James Milner (£18m transfer fee and the £8m valued Stephen Ireland moving in the opposite direction to Villa) and the £22m they paid for Joleon Lescott’s services and it looks something akin to daylight robbery. The combined cost of Vincent Kompany and Kolo Toure was fractionally less than Lescott and the Englishman rarely gets a look in beyond this solid pairing. The fact that nobody has been arrested yet on fraud charges for the £10m transfer of Wayne Bridge to City is nothing short of criminal.

It would be unfair to contrast the Bent deal with say, the Alan Shearer move from Blackburn to Newcastle in 1996 for £15m, for they are two completely incomparable eras and there is simply a lot more money in the game now than there was back then. But Shearer, baring Ronaldo and at a push, Patrick Kluivert, was the best striker in Europe at the time of the deal. Could you honestly count Bent as being in the same category at the moment?

Continue to PAGE TWO…

To put this deal into a more digestible perspective. Fernando Torres cost Liverpool £20m in 2007. Wayne Rooney cost Man Utd £23m in 2004. Didier Drogba’s move to Chelsea in 2004 cost £24m. Bent’s deal has the opportunity to equal or eclipse them all.

Bent will undoubtedly improve Villa on the pitch. They’re a side that’s been crying out for some firepower up top for quite some time and Martin O’Neill seemed quite reluctant to address the issue, instead focussing on trying to stop his side losing games rather than going out their to win them. The way Villa have set up so far under Houllier has seen a change in tack to a more attack-minded approach and perhaps this is why Lerner has backed Houllier so vehemently.

Just five days before the beginning of the season Martin O’Neill quit Villa, with the James Milner deal seemingly the straw that finally broke the camel’s back. It was thought that O’Neill was only going to receive £16m this summer to reinvest in the squad and that this lack of faith and ambition prompted his hasty departure.

Despite his relative success at Villa Park, tensions grew between Lerner and O’Neill and the Chairman, who had already forked out a hefty sum of money on new players upon becoming Chairman, obviously felt that he was seeing enough return on the pitch for his investment, despite the stability and consistency that O’Neill’s tenure offered.

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For a Chairman to turn around a complete policy on spending so quickly is really rather shocking, especially one as stable as Lerner. Only at the end of last season and the beginning of this one was Lerner waxing lyrical about the need to balance the books at Villa Park and that the club, in order to become sustainable in the current economic climate, needed to sell to buy. The Bent signing may not be a panic buy, for he’s just what they need right now, the sudden change in approach most certainly has a panicky ring to it.

Can Villa truly justify spending 25% of their annual turnover on just one player? Particularly when he’s one that’s so reliant on the service that’s given to him. Bent is capable of feeding off scraps and taking the few opportunities that he may receive in any given match, a skill he acquired in his time at lesser lights such as Charlton, Ipswich and to a lesser extent, Sunderland, and while he can be clinical, he’s simply not the sort of player to take teams on and beat them on his own. He’s not a world beater, he’s simply a fantastic goal scorer with a proven track record in the Premier League. It’s imperative now that Villa keep hold of in form and in-demand winger Stewart Downing now, as well as Ashley Young.

Bent is exactly the sort of player that Villa need, but they have been seriously hit in the pocket by two factors – doing their business in January and that fact that the man in question happens to be English. Bent will score goals at Villa, lots of them probably and Houllier’s arm around the shoulder management style will suit a player that needs to be top dog and loved to perform to his best, but that nagging feeling that they are paying over the odds persists.

When a Premier league manager is next criticised for buying a foreign player instead of an English one, can you really blame them after looking at the Bent deal? There is simply no value in the market anymore, particularly if you happen to be born on these fair shores.

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Real Madrid frontrunners to sign Spurs ace

Luka Modric is on the verge of making a move to Real Madrid and will switch to the Santiago Bernabeu after Euro 2012, according to The Daily Mail.

With Tottenham missing out on Champions League football for next term, the White Hart Lane side are thought to have a battle on their hands to hold onto their main players, with the Croatia international being scouted by some of Europe’s biggest teams.

Despite reports in the press indicating that Manchester United are leading the race to sign the diminutive midfielder, Madrid may well now be the team closest to sealing a deal for the playmaker.

Modric’s former team-mate at international level Mate Bilic has stated that the player wants to make a move to Spain, and this could happen in the near future.

“I’m very good friends with Modric,” said the Sporting Gijon striker.

“He wants to play in the Spanish league. He loves the Premier League but he wants to play in Spain. He’s very close to agreeing a move.”

Daniel Levy would not let Modric leave Spurs to join Chelsea last summer, and as yet Tottenham’s approach to the speculation has not been indicated.

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By Gareth McKnight

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Press chase footballers into hiding

Recently I was fortunate enough to attend a Harry Redknapp press conference at Tottenham Hotspur’s training ground. The assembled journalists knew the drill. Wait outside the front entrance until you are called, then go straight through to the conference room and wait for Harry. Don’t take any detours and don’t talk to the players. Sky Sports ask the questions for the T.V. section then it’s cameras off and the print journalists get their time. Unless Redknapp himself says something astounding and controversial, (which is highly unlikely in these tightly run affairs, co-ordinated by the Spurs press officer) it is up to the press to find the angle and make the headlines.

The players are unapproachable these days, and heavily PR trained when they are allowed to face the media but has this distance, this inability to get a direct source of quotes, led to an increase in sensationalist journalism? I don’t think so. I think this distancing of the players is a response to such journalism and a response to the increasingly high stakes in football. Players must now be far more careful what they say so it’s best just to keep them away from trouble.

The English media has an ever-worsening reputation for it’s ruthlessness in chasing and generating headlines. As the current News of the World scandal shows, there are no depths they will not stoop to. The pressure in football has been escalating for years. (It is particularly noticeable in World Cup years as papers simultaneously support and undermine the national team). In April 2006 Luiz Felipe Scolari became linked with the England job and ruled himself out because of the media pressure. ‘There are 20 reporters outside my house…If that is part of another culture, it is not part of my culture…. I don’t want this situation involving England because in two days during which I was not coach, I never agreed to anything, my life was invaded. My privacy was totally under siege.” Scolari highlighted the problem of the English media perfectly.

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It is the right choice to keep the players away from this feeding frenzy. Whilst it may force newspapers to speculate endlessly, I feel quite sure that they would do so anyway. If you give them an inch they will take a mile, best not to give them anything at all.

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The media is sensationalist in all aspects, not just football. Keeping the players away from journalists has not escalated sensationalism, it is a response to it.

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Schwarzer keen to address Cup performance

Mark Schwarzer has revealed Australia’s Asian Cup veterans laid down the law to their younger team-mates ahead of their Qatar campaign.The 38-year-old Fulham goalkeeper was a member of the Socceroos squad that struggled in their debut Asian Cup appearance in 2007.

Billed as one of the favourites to win the tournament after their successful 2006 World Cup campaign, Australia laboured through the group stages and were knocked out in the quarter-finals by Japan.

Four years later, Schwarzer says the Socceroos are determined not to suffer the same fate in Qatar.

“That was something very, very much at the front of our minds,” Schwarzer told the Asian Cup’s official website.

“We made it very clear that for this tournament – especially the players that were there in 2007 and are here now – that we did not want to go through the same sort of process we did then.”

“It was important that we got off to a good start and it was important that we played some decent football as a team.”

The Socceroos have been true to their word so far, defeating India 4-0 and fighting out a 1-1 draw with South Korea to top Group C with four points.

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A draw with Bahrain on Tuesday will be enough to see Australia through to the last eight, and Schwarzer says the next step will be to erase the pain of their quarter-finals loss four years ago.

“We are very united as a group and we are determined to perform better than we did four years ago,” he said.

Juve and Inter’s transfer battle for City ace

Italian sides Juventus and Inter are thought to be in a battle to sign Manchester City left-back Aleksandar Kolarov, according to The Sun.

The Serbian defender has slipped down the pecking order at the Etihad Stadium, with Gael Clichy the preferred choice at left-back for the Premier League champions.

As such a move has been touted for Kolarov, with two of Italy’s biggest clubs fighting it out for his signature.

Both sides are initially interested in signing the eastern European full-back on a loan deal, but City are thought to be keen to recoup as much of the £18 million they splashed on him in 2010.

Kolarov is well-known in Italy as he joined City from Lazio, and the defender’s future at the Etihad Stadium looks in doubt.

Juventus have recently been crowned Serie A champions and are looking to bolster their squad ahead of playing in the Champions League next term, whilst Inter are in transition and need new players to get them back into title contention.

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By Gareth McKnight

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North London should be commended for making a stand

It would seem that after years of being pushed around by spoilt superstars Premier League Chairmen and Managers are fighting back.

Tottenham ’s Daniel Levy has become the latest Chairman to refuse to let one of his star players tear up their contract and walk out because a richer club has come knocking for them.

If this is going to be a new trend then I say, about time, as we have come to a point in our beautiful game when players’ contracts are not worth the paper they are printed on and the thought that players may show loyalty to a club or its fans no longer even crosses the mind.

Levy is not the first boss to try and make a stand though and let’s hope he won’t be the last. Arsene Wenger is still doing an masterful job of keeping his captain and prized asset Cesc Fabregas , who has looked certain to pack his bags and return to his hometown club for 2 seasons and 3 transfer windows now.

But Wenger has dug his heels in deep and looks like he may have deflected Barcelona’s advances for yet another window, although I would suggest he doesn’t hold his breath.

Wenger’s headache does not end there though, now another one of his star players from last season, Samir Nasri has also had his head turned, this time by the newly super-rich Manchester City but Wenger has other ideas regarding this bit of business also; voicing what is or was becoming something of a cliché “not for sale at any price”. I say this has become cliché as we have all heard this very statement all too often and then when it comes down to it what they actually meant was “offer us a bit more and we will put a bow on his head and send him first post”.

So are we looking at two of the most unlikely comrades in football? Spurs’ Chairman teaming up with Arsenal ’s Manager to wage war against players not honouring contracts that they signed for 5 years just 6 months ago.

Who can blame these poor lads who wouldn’t want to change their job if someone was offering to double their wages? This is fair comment but I find it hard to feel sorry for somebody that gets paid 50k a week to do something they love and then moans because they want to leave so they can get 100k a week.

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The only reason players sign 5 year contracts in the first place is because they are greedy. Despite this it has become an unwritten rule that if a player hands in a transfer request then they are allowed to leave. We’ve all heard the cries of “if a player doesn’t want to be there then no point keeping them”, with the general conception being if the player’s heart is not in it then they will not perform and Fabregas did little to disprove this last season.

Surely the least a Chairman should be able to expect from a player that they are paying the average yearly wage for Britain every week is that they play as well as they can?

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These attempts by the two North London rivals to make a stand and tell their players that they will be staying as they are under contract and that’s that, although heart warming and ambitious I fear that it may just turn out to be money spinning bravado. Only time will tell if they are successful I for one will not be putting any money on either of them being at the same club come kick-off on the first day of the Premier League season.

Article courtesy of Shane Peters from This is Futbol

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Tottenham exit will prove the best deal all round

When Robbie Keane returned to Tottenham from Liverpool in 2009 it was supposed to be a hero’s return. His mission was to help keep Tottenham in the Premier League, which they did, but Keane was never the same player and he didn’t really win over the White Hart Lane faithful.

Many Spurs fans never quite forgave the Irishman when he left for Liverpool in the summer of 2008. Despite saying that he would stay at Spurs for as long as he was happy and as long as the club wanted him he sealed his move away on the 28th July. It was his departure, followed by that of Dimitar Berbatov, which signalled Tottenham’s sudden decline at the start of the 2008/09 season.

Originally many Spurs fans hailed his return as a great piece of business by new manager Harry Redknapp, but many were also unimpressed that Tottenham were prepared to offer the struggling striker an olive branch just months after he’d been so desperate to leave. Keane’s first game back for Spurs was at home against Arsenal – the perfect opportunity to regain his hero status. Even though he played fairly well and Tottenham got a creditable draw Keane missed a glorious chance to get the winner, and the remainder of his Tottenham career panned out in much the same way.

If you take away Keane’s four goal showing against Burnley he only managed to score two league goals in the 09/10 season before he was allowed to go to Celtic on loan. By this point Keane had fallen sharply down the strikers’ pecking order and his performances had become lazy and aimless, a shadow of the player he once was. His temporary move to Celtic, one of his boyhood clubs, was a resounding success but raised the question among Spurs fans as to why it took a move north of the border for Keane to refind his form.

Keane has only featured sporadically in the Tottenham first XI this season and his appearance against FC Twente seemed to be Harry Redknapp allowing him a last hurrah as much as anything else. Redknapp said earlier in the week that Keane could be sold to the highest bidder with Wolves reportedly in the frame for the player.

It is worth remembering that Keane is still only 30 years old so potentially has another five or six years of top flight football left in him, however his poor second spell at Tottenham has left people thinking that he is already over the hill.

When Keane does depart I don’t think that Spurs fans will lose much sleep. However I also feel that while a move is the right deal for all concerned, his departure will trigger feelings of ‘if only’ for a man whose return has tarnished his previously untouchable reputation at White Hart Lane.

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Coventry’s Rebuilding Halted Due To Transfer Embargo

Any positivity surrounding Coventry City seems to once again be disappearing. There was and still maybe every potential that we could do really well in League One next season.

However this is looking more and more unlikely as the pendulum swings back towards negativity.

A conclusion to the negotiations over the Ricoh Arena is still a long way off, a suggestion of a minimum of 60 days has been given and that is if everything goes to plan along the way. I think we all know that when SISU are involved things do not go to plan, so therefore we are realistically looking at this being resolved well into next season.

It is widely understood that the transfer embargo imposed on Coventry will not be lifted until these negotiations have come to a conclusion. SISU reportedly want to include the revenue, which owning a share in the Ricoh will bring, in their accounts before they file them to the Football League.

This is on the face of it, a sensible thing to be doing, however if it is going to be detrimental to the clubs success next season then surely it is not worth waiting for. There is also every chance that these negotiations may break down at some point as everyone knows relations between SISU and everyone else are not great at the best of times.

Any hope we had of making any signings that would truly improve us as a squad is disappearing quickly; not only based on the transfer embargo but also on the calibre of player that Andy Thorn is clearly looking at. Thorn has suggested that the players he is interested in are mainly free transfers.

Players who are available in this way usually fall into two categories. Firstly there are players who have issues and questionable aspects to their games. These players are often no longer wanted by their current clubs because they are not seen as good enough and not worthy of another contract when their current deal expires.

These players often include the ones wanting high wages, the ones who are not massively passionate about that particular football club and play mainly for the money. Obviously, these things usually become less of an issue as you get further down the leagues but I think these things are still very much an issue in League One. These are the types of players that we don’t need at the club, we need players who are passionate and hungry to chase success in helping Coventry rebuild in a very difficult division.

The second is an out of contract player who has become too good for their current club and instead of signing a new deal wants to move to a bigger club in an attempt to further their career. The problem here is that we can no longer be considered a big club with all of our off field problems. We are also not going to be able to compete with other clubs for these players in terms of wages that we can offer for them.

There are obvious exceptions to this and sometimes gems can be found that others have disregarded. This is what I am personally hoping for and in Thorn I trust in terms of his ability to determine whether a player has potential or not.

The main rumour going around at the minute is that of out of contract striker James Collins who scored 16 goals for Shrewsbury in their promotion from League Two this season. I don’t really know a lot about him other than he is 21 and a Coventry lad but he seems to have the potential to be a hit in League One. If this is the best we are going for though then maybe we won’t have too much competition for his signature, we will however definitely lose him if we don’t sign him soon.

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No player whatever level of quality is going to wait for a club and for that reason we are in trouble. Any player who is out of contract will attract at least some interest just because there is no transfer fee involved. Any decent out of contract players won’t be on the market for long and if we continue the way we are going we will miss out on these players and probably have to go with what we already have which by the end of the transfer market is not going to be much.

Our club is clearly still on the downward slope right now and I think that is clear for everyone to see. I have been one of the people who have wanted SISU out of the club for a long time but also have always been willing to give them a chance to prove themselves. Once again though it seems like they are going to fall flat on their faces and it is going to be the club and us supporters who suffer.

PUSB!!

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United Fans Could Be Given The Chance To Prove their Real Worth

Supporting the greatest club in the world isn’t exactly a difficult experience if we’re completely honest.

Yes, we may have lost our second Champions League final in three years and I’ve lost count of the amount of times I’ve heard “we always make it hard for ourselves” but by and large being part of Ferguson’s red and white army is a joyous endeavour, where the good times far outweigh the bad.

With a constant stream of trophies, goals and victories its easy for some fans to forget just how fortunate we are and how far we’ve come since the dark-ish- days of Fergie’s early reign.

In the 20 odd years I’ve spent following United I can pretty much count on one hand the times I’ve been ashamed of the behaviour of some of our fans.

In 1996 it was the booing of Lee Sharpe at Old Trafford who had something of a shocker in one of his final games in a red shirt- his substitution was met with a chorus of cheers and applause. 2008 at half time against Villa I watched with disbelief as some fans ran towards the tunnel to give Nani and Cristiano Ronaldo abuse- although I think that may have been more to do with the drugs they were on rather than just passion.

2009/10 saw one of the worst examples of ridiculous behaviour by United fans when Dimitar Berbatov was hounded in the game against Spurs. Before he’d even touched the ball, shouts of “useless, lazy Bulgarian tw*t” etc, could be heard from more than a just a small minority and let’s not forget the treatment Michael Carrick recieved against Bayern Munich.

I digress however, the point isn’t that United fans are ungrateful, in fact it’s the opposite, United fans are the best in the world of that I’m in no doubt, and next season may give us the perfect opportunity to prove it.

In David De Gea United haven’t bought the finished article, a player who’ll make Edwin Van Der Sar seem like a distant memory. What we’ve got is a 20 year-old supremely talented player who will need time to settle into not just at a far bigger club than he’s been at previously but also a whole new country, culture and way of life.

It would be easy if De Gea were to struggle during the first few weeks of his United career for some fans to get on his back, to let him know our disappointment via a few well timed shouts or maybe even chants of “Edwin, Van Der Sar, Edwin, Edwin, Van Der Sar.”

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When the fans are on a players case you can feel it in the air, the end of the 2009/10 season is a prime example, the feeling of anger aimed towards Berbatov by some fans was almost tangible.

This isn’t the norm though, I remember in 1995/6 Andy Cole had started the season struggling for goals after a somewhat mixed first season at United. He’d scored a good amount of goals but the club had finished trophyless and much was made of his failure to convert one of the chances he’d had at Upton Park which would have given United the league.

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With only 2 league goals in the opening twelve games, Cole wasn’t enjoying the best of starts. Cue the United fans. In the game against Southampton at Old Trafford, the crowd chanted “Andy Cole…” throughout the entire game, almost in unison and after an hour were rewarded with a goal from the former Newcastle man who rounded off a four one win.

United fans aren’t all the prawn sandwich eating glory hunters some would have us labelled we can be among the most loyal, understanding and patient fans around people seem to forget we experienced over a quarter of a century without a title, yet still had the biggest crowds in Britain. Next season if De Gea struggles it may be just the sort of test for United fans to show we have a right to call ourselves the best in the world.

I’m not saying he will of course, but it’s not beyond the realms of possibility that the young ‘keeper may take a little while to settle in.

Read more of Justin’s articles at Red Flag Flying High

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