Home > Football > Can safety-first Sven drag Manchester City out of the shadow of Manchester United?
by Ty Duffy on 12 July 2007
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Manchester United played arguably the most exciting, free-flowing brand of football in Europe last season scoring 83 goals en route to the Premiership title. Manchester City? Not so much . . .
To describe Man City as bad last year would be akin to saying that Michael Jackson was a bit odd. They were not just awful. They were historically horrible. Their measly 10 goals at home in 19 league matches was the lowest tally in 120 seasons of top-flight football. Their putrid play sent supporters home and television viewers into REM sleep.
They managed to scrape together 42 pts and avoid relegation, though, in the name of entertainment, many wish they hadn't. The fallout would lead to the sacking of manager Stuart Pierce and the departure of many players, most notably Joey Barton.
There was some optimism, however, as city joined the foreign takeover club with an £81.6m buyout by deposed Thai Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra. One of his first moves was to hire former England manager Sven-Goran Eriksson, and giving him a £50m war chest as part of three-year plan to rebuild the squad and challenge for Europe. The club had serious money on the table, and a manager who (though disappointing for England) has had an excellent record as a club manager in Sweden, Portugal, and Italy. On paper, they appeared to be heading in the right direction, though that buoyancy has been short-lived.
Sven was appalled at the state of the playing squad when he checked in. Not necessarily endearing himself to the players already there, Sven has requested funding for some minor restructuring, in the form of four new strikers, two wide players, a central midfielder, two defenders, and a goalkeeper. It is an ambitious target list, to say the least.
Sven is most assuredly right that the squad needs a major influx of talented (or at least competent) players. They lack depth at every position. They have no-one in the midfield to replace Barton, and no genuine wide players to stretch the opposition. They also have not even a half-way decent striker. And the problem is that it will be extremely difficult for him to get anyone to go there. He was initially linked to the likes of Nickolas Anelka and Michael Owen, but even though City have the money, it's hard to convince ambitious players that moving to a dire City squad would be a forward, or even a lateral move.
In addition, Sven's pedigree as a former England manager will not exactly help him. The players who played under him for England are out of his range of targets. He would realistically have to shoot for players peripheral or maybe just short of International level - like a Jermaine Defoe. However, he has already burned bridges with a number of these players by not selecting them for the national team.
Sven's first, and only, major signing thus far has been 24-year-old Italian striker Rolando Bianchi for a preliminary fee of £8.8m. On the surface, this appears to be a decent signing. Bianchi was the fourth leading scorer in Serie A for Reggina last season, where he scored 18 goals in 38 appearances. He has been linked to Roma, AC Milan, and Juventus. It seems like City fans should be excited to have a player of his quality. But, they should be cautioned by the fact that Bianchi has managed only four goals in 69 appearances over his previous six seasons.
City are a big club, with a lot of money, and a high-profile manager. Their primary concern this season should be to not get relegated, and they must assume that mentality. As for signings, they certainly could have beaten out Wigan for Jason Koumas or Fulham for Kamara. Those aren't sexy headline grabbing signings, but they would have added depth and a bit of quality. The market for Premiership-ready players looks slim and deflated, which will force Sven to take some big risks and look under rocks to be successful.
Comments (6)
by Danny on July 12, 2007
Joey Barton was not the Captain of Manchester City, which team would have an unruly disruptive player in this role?
by bluemoon on July 12, 2007
You clearly have no idea, what the hell you are talking about, joey barton captain(WRONG). stick to them shite sports like baseball( os as well call it in the uk (rounders a girls game) and basketball. Numpty of the highest order.
by Mike on July 12, 2007
Barton was never captain. It was Dunne last season
there's 5 minutes of my life i'll never get back
by Ty on July 12, 2007
Sorry, I didn't catch that when I read back through it. I did know that Dunne was actually captain. I was thinking best player and that slipped out. Thank you for being so dilligent in pointing that out to me and providing me with such intellectual and well thought out feedback. Your obviously knowledgeable and reasoned analysis of baseball has been personally illuminating to me. I thank you.
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