Monthly Archives: August 2012

Mancini expects tough Liverpool trip

Roberto Mancini is expecting a tough test for Manchester City when they travel to face Liverpool on Sunday.

The Italian boss knows the size of the task ahead, whilst insisting that difficult games are becoming routine for his side at the beginning of a new campaign.

Last year City beat Tottenham 5-1 away in the third game of the season however Mancini does not believe a similar result will be seen.

“Two years ago the second game was Liverpool. It’s always tough game for us. Liverpool will be a very strong game,” he told The Manchester Evening News

“The game against Tottenham I think can happen once every 10 years. I don’t know. We will try but it’s enough to win 1-0.”

Carlos Tevez has enjoyed a fine start to the season, netting in the Community Shield and City’s Premier League opener against Southampton and Mancini has hailed the Argentine’s pre-season preparations as vital to his good form.

“For Carlos it’s the first time in four, five years that he did a pre-season,” Mancini added. “It’s normal that if you work hard in pre-season you can be in good form, like him.”

The Italian also hailed his side’s versatility after experimenting with a three-man defence in pre-season while switching back to a four-man backline against Southampton.

Mancini also reserved praise for Jack Rodwell after his arrival from Everton.

“I think that we can play with different shapes,” he added.

“Against Southampton, we played like last year with Jack for Gareth or for Nigel. I wanted to see Jack for the first time with us. It was a good performance.

“It wasn’t easy for him being the first game because he didn’t know his team-mates very well. But I think he did very well.”

What we learned this week: Eden Hazard is the anti-Downing

By George Ankers

Hazard is the anti-Downing

After perhaps the most irritating transfer saga of all time (a big call, yes, but honestly, who takes that much pleasure from teasing people on Twitter?), Eden Hazard might just be worth it after all.

The Belgian Barnstormer had built himself quite the reputation in Ligue 1 and he certainly milked it for all it was worth as he tarted around England’s elite this summer before finally settling on Chelsea. The pressure was on; he’d probably need to be, at least, quite good in order to justify all the drama.

He may only have been facing first Wigan, who are to being even vaguely competent in the first half of a season what long-dead painting enthusiast Claude Monet is to professional Starcraft, and newly promoted Reading, that is true. But you’ve got to start somewhere.

Hazard made the difference in both matches, racking up five assists, including winning almost the exact same penalty in each one. That’s already more than twice Stewart Downing’s total assists for Liverpool for only 60 per cent more money.

Indeed, if Chelsea’s new darling keeps up this form, he will assist more goals this season (95) than the entire Manchester City team scored in 2011-12 (93). WWLTW suspects that Downing, who made a satirical substitute appearance at left-back against Hearts on Thursday, hasn’t even scored 95 goals on his PlayStation.

So pencil it into your diaries, folks: a presumably cold and damp January 12, 2013. Stoke City versus Chelsea.

If Hazard, who by that time will have laid on precisely 52.5 goals, so much as belches in a way that alters the wind direction just enough to lay the ball into Fernando Torres’ path, it will be safe to insert him above Lionel Messi in the list of the world’s best players. Right?

Photo of the week

David Moyes has mastered the secrets of time

David Moyes has been more active in the transfer market this summer than in recent years, signing three players, which is precisely three more than he does most summers.

We should have suspected. We should have known that it was too much. Too public. Moyes has been trying to distract us from the fact that he has mastered time itself.

While having his minions scurry about purchasing Kevin Mirallas, the Everton boss has clearly been locked away in his secret laboratory (which may or may not be bigger on the inside), fiddling with wires and antimatter and a DeLorean, and at the end of it he succeeded in transporting the Toffees to January and back.

Everton don’t win at the start of the season. This is footballing fact, sure as night follows day and Nani wastes corner kicks. But win they did, over Manchester United no less. Convincingly. It’s sheer genius from their mad scientist manager, though you do worry what will happen when they all go on holiday in February.

WWLTW is more concerned, though, with what Moyes will do now that he has this power. Sure, he’ll just use it for football purposes for now, but once Everton have wrapped up the Premier League title in November, he’ll get bored. Restless. If he were to turn his hand to world domination, WWLTW wouldn’t be surprised and this column, for one, welcomes our new ginger overlord.

QPR don’t take defeat well

Last Friday, WWLTW complained about the nature of the transfer window and implied that it might disagree with the concept as a whole. “Why not let clubs just buy and sell when they want?”, you might wonder.

Well, now we have an answer: It’s for QPR’s sake.

Having lost 5-0 to Swansea City on the Premier League’s opening day, manager Mark Hughes’ response was to push the panic button and buy, buy, buy!

Nobody is safe. Robert Green was only recruited from West Ham this summer but one mistake to let Michu through for the first goal and suddenly Julio Cesar is summoned from Italian giants Inter for negotiations.

Clint Hill and Anton Ferdinand look to have been summarily binned as Hughes pounces for Michael Dawson from Tottenham and out-of-favour Ricardo Carvalho from Real Madrid. Isn’t players moving from Madrid and Inter to QPR one of the horsemen of the apocalypse? WWLTW forgets.

If all three sign on the dotted line, they’ll take the Londoners’ headcount to 24 new players in the past 13 months. Just imagining how many more they would have bought after every one of their 21 Premier League defeats last season would give Stephen Hawking a migraine.

It’s probably lucky, then, that QPR are set to play Manchester City away the day after the window shuts. Not many things inspire sympathy for Tony Fernandes’ wallet – but the consequences of 15 Carlos Tevez goals plucked from Old Man Carvalho if business were still open just might.

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Liverpool – Manchester City Preview: Reds look to bounce back from opening-day humbling

Brendan Rodgers opted to rest several keys figures for Thursday night’s Europa League qualification clash against Hearts in anticipation for the visit of the Premier League champions.

Steven Gerrard, Luis Suarez, Martin Skrtel and Glen Johnson should all be recalled to the Reds’ starting XI. Jose Enrique could also be back in contention after missing the opening game of the season due to a knock sustained in training.

Daniel Agger serves a one-match suspension after his red card against West Brom, while both Andy Carroll and Joe Cole (hamstrings) are unlikely to feature.

Roberto Mancini will have to make do without the services of Sergio Aguero (knee) for a month after the striker was stretchered ff last Sunday against Southampton. Mario Balotelli is likely to have recovered sufficiently from conjunctivitis to step in to partner Carlos Tevez up front.

Gareth Barry (hernia) and Micah Richards (ankle) continue to be absent for the visitors, meaning that Jack Rodwell should be able to build upon his debut last week, with another run out at Anfield.

  • The Reds’ 3-0 loss to West Brom last week was their worst ever opening to a Premier League campaign.
  • If Jose Reina (right) starts as expected he will equal Graeme Souness and Alan Kennedy’s apperance record of 359 for the club.
  • After playing against Hearts midweek Joe Allen has now made 100 passes for Liverpool in two competitive appearances, with 96 of them finding their target.
  • Manchester City have now won seven Premier League matches on the bounce.
  • In between the years 2010 and 2012, Joe Hart is the top-flight goalkeeper who has kept the most clean sheets with 35. Liverpool’s Reina is in second place, with 26.
  • Liverpool turned down a £20m bid from City for central defender Daniel Agger this summer.
  • The last game Roberto Mancini’s side did not win was their 1-0 reverse at Emirates Stadium on April 8, a defeat that looked to end their hopes of sealing the Premier League title.
  • Samir Nasri and Carlos Tevez have started the season in form. Both the Frenchman and Argentine netted in City’s community Shield win over Chelsea and their opening victory against Southampton.