Summer 2012 Transfer window thread

He said that he is willing to listen to offers for any of the squad. I am reading that as being the likes of Adam, Henderson, Downing and Carroll and not the likes of Gerrard and Suarez.

[quote=“farmerinthecity, post: 657277”]

He said that he is willing to listen to offers for any of the squad. I am reading that as being the likes of Adam, Henderson, Downing and Carroll and not the likes of Gerrard and Suarez.[/quote]
How will the magnificent Lucas fit into Rodgers plans?

Lucas is the system :guns:

Swansea have completed the signing of midfielder Michu from Rayo Vallecano for 2 million.

This guy scored 15 goals in 30 odd matches in La Liga last season so on the face of it it appears a good bit of business by Laudrup.

Looking forward to see how Rodgers shapes the Liverpool squad alright. :clap:

Inter have dropped Pazzini, Julio Cesar and Maicon from their summer squad so it looks like they are all for the off.

I’d imagine Maicon will join one of Real Madrid/PSG/Chelsea. I predict that Pazzini will join Juventus as a replacement for Matri who I suspect will join Milan. Julio Cesar is a more complicated one, not many of the big sides are in the market for a new keeper, perhaps Spurs might be interested.

Reports suggesting MON has signed Collins and Warnock for Sunderland. Please let it be true.

Collins is solid enough but been involved in too many off field scrapes. Brainless enough player but will suit the blood and thunder approach MON likes from his defenders. Warnock is utter shite.

4m the fee apparently which is all we can expect really from 2 players with only 12 months left on their contract. MON if this deal comes through will have brought 3 Villa defenders to Sunderland for 4m that he originally bought for around 20m in total.

Tim Cahill is to sign for the New York Red Bulls. The Barclays Premier League™’s loss is undoubtedly Major League Soccer’s gain.

An excellent player in his day. Surprised he never got a transfer to one of the bigger clubs in the EPL.

Always felt if he wasnt scoring he was doing fuck all as in his goals masked a lot of defincies but he was a dangerous wee fucker around the box all the same. Done well with what he had, best of luck to young Kayhill.

Arsenal keen on Carzola who Malaga may be forced to sell because they’re broke. They went from megarich to bust in the space of a few months apparently.

Weird one. What happened them?

Manuel Almunia has joined Watford

Goal.com are exclusively revealing that Liverpool have agreed a deal of £13.5m for Joe Allen. The fact that it’s a goal.com exclusive would make you wonder whether this is bullshit although they did call the Sigurdsson one right. I think Allen is a very good player with great scope to improve but £13.5m is far too much, especially for a side like Liverpool who wouldn’t have a massive budget this season and need to use it to cover a lot of bases.

The policy of paying good money for british players has served them well up to now. No need to change a winning formula.

Johnny Heitiga looks to be movuing to Turkey. Yet another of Everton’s top earners gone off the books, they must be fucked financially

Should be good news for Ireland’s Shane Duffy though

Carzola to Arsenal looks closer to completion. He’d be another excellent attacking acquisition for them. They still need to sort out their defence though.

He’d be a good signing for Arsenal. If Wenger could hold onto Van Persie and bring in M’Vila, then Arsenal should be just three or four signings in defence away from really challenging for the title this season. Getting rid of all the deadwood like Diaby, Djourou, Squillaci, Bendtner, Arshavin, Chamakh and Park would really allow them finance a major assault this summer.

Bendtner has been linked with a move to AC Milan in the last couple of days

Decent article here on the recent goings-on but nobody really seems to know why they don’t have money anymore, just that they don’t have it.

http://elcentrocampista.com/2012/07/missed-payments-and-denouncements-just-what-is-going-on-at-malaga/

Last week saw the playing staff of Malaga CF return to pre-season training ahead of a campaign that should prove the most important in the history of the Andaluz club.

After a more than impressive fourth-placed finish last time out, Manuel Pellegrini’s men will now experience their first-ever foray into the Uefa Champions League and many suggest Malaga look best placed to provide the strongest challenge yet to the established duopoly at the top of the Spanish game.

So how did the week come to a close with the season threatening to implode before it has even begun, and suggestions rife that their best player, Santi Cazorla wants to quit after less than a year at the club?

Malaga have been in the headlines for all the wrong reasons this week. It began with allegations made by AFE President Luis Rubiales, who claimed four players at the club were still owed between 35% and 40% of their salaries by their employers.
It was soon revealed the players in question were Cazorla, Joris Mathijsen, Salomon Rondon, and the recently-retired Ruud van Nistelrooy – with further reports suggesting both Cazorla and Rondon had told officials they no longer wanted to play for los Boquerones.

Then news emerged that Villarreal had finally lost patience and reported Malaga over an outstanding VAT payment, said to be around €3.5m, that they claim they are still owed for the sale of Cazorla last summer.

The Valencian outfit had already threatened legal action over the debt earlier this year, although an agreement then looked to have been reached after a series of negotiations between representative from both clubs. However, Villarreal now claim no payments have been received from Malaga and they have lodged an official complaint with Uefa.

German Bundesliga side Hamburg have also criticised Malaga recently over missed payments relating to the Mathijsen deal, and a temporary transfer ban was imposed on the club in January after it emerged Osasuna were still owed money as part of the Nacho Monreal transfer in June.

It hasn’t just been other clubs that appear to have been short-changed however, French midfielder Jeremy Toulalan is also said to have been less than impressed with his bosses and is believed to have threatened a walk-out unless he was paid wages he said were still outstanding.

The club gave complex administrative proceedings surrounding fund transfer from the middle-east as their defence, however the situation soon proved too much for Sporting Director Fernando Hierro, who promptly stepped down citing unhappiness at the ‘inner dealings of the club.’

Malaga’s situation is nothing new in Spanish football of course and fans of the club feel aggrieved by what they perceive as media assassination – pointing to the debt of clubs such as Atletico, Betis and Osasuna who are all reported to owe more money than Malaga yet seem to attract far less attention from the press.

However, the situation is beginning to escalate, with reports now suggesting another transfer embargo may be sanctioned after the most recent complaint rumoured to have been made by Osasuna.

Malaga released an official statement on their website on Friday, announcing an agreement had been reached to pay outstanding wages to their players, who in turn are said to have retracted their denouncement of the club.

However, the damage may already have been done, most notably in the case of Cazorla who has said very little since the latest situation began. Currently on an extended holiday, the 27-year-old was immediately linked with a host of big-name clubs – with English Premier League sides Arsenal and Tottenham featuring most prominent in the gossip columns.

Malaga officials were obviously quick to play down the spat and insisted Cazorla was going nowhere. That has done little to quell the speculation however, and many now wonder whether the club can fully repair the damaged relationship with their most influence player of last season.

It seems astonishing that a club bankrolled by billionaire benefactor Sheikh Al-Thani should find themselves in their current predicament, and it has left a bitter taste in the mouth for all those involved. A sense of uncertainty now surrounds the club and it is currently unclear as to how the situation will unfold.

Ultimately, only time will provide the answers but with just five weeks left until the start of the new season, time is something that Malaga do not have too much of.