Arsene Wenger has told friends that he is preparing for his final season as manager of Arsenal, Goal.com can reveal.
The Frenchman has three years remaining on the new contract that he signed last summer but has privately conceded that his tenure at the club is coming to an end.
The longest-serving manager in Arsenal’s history has already begun considering other options in football because he fears his powerbase will eventually be diminished by new owner Stan Kroenke and has been shocked by the growing criticism he has received from supporters over the last 12 months.
Goal.com understands that Wenger met a Manchester City delegation led by chief executive Garry Cook and football administrator Brian Marwood at a hotel in Kensington, west London, in May although there is no confirmation that the Frenchman either sought to or was asked to replace Roberto Mancini at Etihad Stadium.
Nevertheless, the Arsenal manager held informal talks with the new owners of Qatari-owned Paris Saint-Germain this summer to discuss the prospect of him taking over as manager at the French club.
PSG - who have spent heavily on new players, including €43 million on Javier Pastore, over the last two months - targeted Wenger as their No.1 choice to use the club’s financial muscle to restore their place at the summit of French football and establish them among the Champions League elite. The club has not won Ligue 1 since 1994.
Wenger, who owns an apartment close to PSG’s Parc des Princes stadium, rejected the opportunity although he admitted in an interview with a Strasbourg TV station in June that he has long-standing friendships with senior officials at the club. It is believed that the Arsenal manager has had a loose arrangement for many years to advise PSG on transfers and recruitment strategy.
One source said that Wenger has established a “great relationship” with the French club’s Qatari investors, who could make another move for him if PSG underachieve this season under new sporting director Leonardo and coach Antoine Kombouare.
His relationship with Arsenal supporters has become increasingly tense over the last year, particularly after the club extended their trophy drought to six years following a disastrous finish to last season.
Wenger promised that he would be “very active” in the transfer market in the summer as he pledged to rebuild a team that has faded badly in recent campaigns and, while he has spent relatively large sums on two attacking midfielders, Gervinho and Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain, with the new Premier League season about to kick off, he has yet to address the club’s chronic defensive frailties.
Saturday, August 13, 2011
SHOCK SWAP- Arsenal tell Man City: Carlos Tevez for Samir Nasri
ARSENAL have sensationally told Manchester
City: Give us Carlos Tevez and you can have
Samir Nasri.
Hitman Tevez has been trying to get out of Manchester
all summer.
And with Arsenal boss Arsene Wenger under growing
pressure to bring in a top buy, the Gunners have
suddenly come up with their shock proposal.
Midfielder Nasri had hoped to sign for City by yesterday
lunchtime after being promised a £180,000-a-week
deal.
But Arsenal - also on the verge of losing skipper Cesc
Fabregas - have blocked the move while they see if
they can sort a swap with Tevez.
The Gunners will have to make a cash adjustment in
City's favour for the Argie because the club's top scorer
is valued at £50million.
The best Arsenal can get for Nasri is £25m as there is
only one year remaining on the French star's contract -
meaning he could walk for nothing next summer.
However, Arsenal are hoping to get the Tevez fee down
by £10m.
And they believe they can come to an agreement over
his wages which could be as much as £200,000 a
week.
Tevez has said he wants out of City to be closer to his
family in Argentina but London is only 200 miles nearer
South America than Manchester.
However, SunSport understands Tevez would be
delighted to join Arsenal in a move which would be a
massive boost for their fans.
An Arsenal insider said: "Tevez would be just the
signing to give everyone a lift.
"There is a lot of work to be done yet but if there is a
will on all sides it can happen.
"Nasri wants to get to City, Tevez wants to get out and
Wenger needs a new star to get everyone off his back.
"It seems like win-win all round."
Meanwhile, Fabregas' expected departure to Barcelona
has been delayed.
The midfield general was hoping to fly out yesterday to
seal his £35million move to the Spanish champions.
But Barca have told him to wait until Monday when they
hope to complete the formalities on a five-year deal.
The Gunners last night agreed terms with Costa Rican
side Deportivo Saprissa to sign teenage striker Joel
Campbell.
City: Give us Carlos Tevez and you can have
Samir Nasri.
Hitman Tevez has been trying to get out of Manchester
all summer.
And with Arsenal boss Arsene Wenger under growing
pressure to bring in a top buy, the Gunners have
suddenly come up with their shock proposal.
Midfielder Nasri had hoped to sign for City by yesterday
lunchtime after being promised a £180,000-a-week
deal.
But Arsenal - also on the verge of losing skipper Cesc
Fabregas - have blocked the move while they see if
they can sort a swap with Tevez.
The Gunners will have to make a cash adjustment in
City's favour for the Argie because the club's top scorer
is valued at £50million.
The best Arsenal can get for Nasri is £25m as there is
only one year remaining on the French star's contract -
meaning he could walk for nothing next summer.
However, Arsenal are hoping to get the Tevez fee down
by £10m.
And they believe they can come to an agreement over
his wages which could be as much as £200,000 a
week.
Tevez has said he wants out of City to be closer to his
family in Argentina but London is only 200 miles nearer
South America than Manchester.
However, SunSport understands Tevez would be
delighted to join Arsenal in a move which would be a
massive boost for their fans.
An Arsenal insider said: "Tevez would be just the
signing to give everyone a lift.
"There is a lot of work to be done yet but if there is a
will on all sides it can happen.
"Nasri wants to get to City, Tevez wants to get out and
Wenger needs a new star to get everyone off his back.
"It seems like win-win all round."
Meanwhile, Fabregas' expected departure to Barcelona
has been delayed.
The midfield general was hoping to fly out yesterday to
seal his £35million move to the Spanish champions.
But Barca have told him to wait until Monday when they
hope to complete the formalities on a five-year deal.
The Gunners last night agreed terms with Costa Rican
side Deportivo Saprissa to sign teenage striker Joel
Campbell.
SHOCK SWAP- Arsenal tell Man City: Carlos Tevez for Samir Nasri
ARSENAL have sensationally told Manchester
City: Give us Carlos Tevez and you can have
Samir Nasri.
Hitman Tevez has been trying to get out of Manchester
all summer.
And with Arsenal boss Arsene Wenger under growing
pressure to bring in a top buy, the Gunners have
suddenly come up with their shock proposal.
Midfielder Nasri had hoped to sign for City by yesterday
lunchtime after being promised a £180,000-a-week
deal.
But Arsenal - also on the verge of losing skipper Cesc
Fabregas - have blocked the move while they see if
they can sort a swap with Tevez.
The Gunners will have to make a cash adjustment in
City's favour for the Argie because the club's top scorer
is valued at £50million.
The best Arsenal can get for Nasri is £25m as there is
only one year remaining on the French star's contract -
meaning he could walk for nothing next summer.
However, Arsenal are hoping to get the Tevez fee down
by £10m.
And they believe they can come to an agreement over
his wages which could be as much as £200,000 a
week.
Tevez has said he wants out of City to be closer to his
family in Argentina but London is only 200 miles nearer
South America than Manchester.
However, SunSport understands Tevez would be
delighted to join Arsenal in a move which would be a
massive boost for their fans.
An Arsenal insider said: "Tevez would be just the
signing to give everyone a lift.
"There is a lot of work to be done yet but if there is a
will on all sides it can happen.
"Nasri wants to get to City, Tevez wants to get out and
Wenger needs a new star to get everyone off his back.
"It seems like win-win all round."
Meanwhile, Fabregas' expected departure to Barcelona
has been delayed.
The midfield general was hoping to fly out yesterday to
seal his £35million move to the Spanish champions.
But Barca have told him to wait until Monday when they
hope to complete the formalities on a five-year deal.
The Gunners last night agreed terms with Costa Rican
side Deportivo Saprissa to sign teenage striker Joel
Campbell.
City: Give us Carlos Tevez and you can have
Samir Nasri.
Hitman Tevez has been trying to get out of Manchester
all summer.
And with Arsenal boss Arsene Wenger under growing
pressure to bring in a top buy, the Gunners have
suddenly come up with their shock proposal.
Midfielder Nasri had hoped to sign for City by yesterday
lunchtime after being promised a £180,000-a-week
deal.
But Arsenal - also on the verge of losing skipper Cesc
Fabregas - have blocked the move while they see if
they can sort a swap with Tevez.
The Gunners will have to make a cash adjustment in
City's favour for the Argie because the club's top scorer
is valued at £50million.
The best Arsenal can get for Nasri is £25m as there is
only one year remaining on the French star's contract -
meaning he could walk for nothing next summer.
However, Arsenal are hoping to get the Tevez fee down
by £10m.
And they believe they can come to an agreement over
his wages which could be as much as £200,000 a
week.
Tevez has said he wants out of City to be closer to his
family in Argentina but London is only 200 miles nearer
South America than Manchester.
However, SunSport understands Tevez would be
delighted to join Arsenal in a move which would be a
massive boost for their fans.
An Arsenal insider said: "Tevez would be just the
signing to give everyone a lift.
"There is a lot of work to be done yet but if there is a
will on all sides it can happen.
"Nasri wants to get to City, Tevez wants to get out and
Wenger needs a new star to get everyone off his back.
"It seems like win-win all round."
Meanwhile, Fabregas' expected departure to Barcelona
has been delayed.
The midfield general was hoping to fly out yesterday to
seal his £35million move to the Spanish champions.
But Barca have told him to wait until Monday when they
hope to complete the formalities on a five-year deal.
The Gunners last night agreed terms with Costa Rican
side Deportivo Saprissa to sign teenage striker Joel
Campbell.
The truth behind why Guus Hiddink did not become chelsea manager this summer.
All eyes will be on Andre Villas-Boas tomorrow lunchtime as he takes charge of his first competitive Chelsea fixture against notoriously tricky opponents Stoke City at the Britannia Stadium.
Yet, had a remarkable proposal by Guus Hiddink been better received by Roman Abramovich seven weeks ago then Villas-Boas would be barking out instructions from the touchline at Guimares tomorrow in a Porto tracksuit.
Goal.com can reveal for the first time how close Hiddink came to being appointed the Chelsea manager in mid-June and the lengths the Dutchman was prepared to go to rejoin the club he led during a caretaker spell two years previously.
An agreement had been reached between Chelsea, Hiddink and his employer the Turkish Football Federation (TFF) in mid-June for the most successful Dutch manager in history to succeed Carlo Ancelotti.
But the spanner in the works was the TFF president election, which was held on June 28. Mahmut Ozgener, the former president and Hiddink’s top ally at the Federation, had indicated a fortnight before the summit that he would stand down from his post, which resulted in a vacuum of power at the organisation.
“Everything was in place for Hiddink to go to Chelsea but no-one at the TFF was prepared to take the responsibility to negotiate with Chelsea and release Hiddink from his contract,” a source close to the negotiations told Goal.com. “If there had been a president, then it would have been a lot easier."
With Abramovich keen to have a new manager in place immediately and Hiddink unwilling to end a proud record of honouring his contracts by resigning at the twilight point of his career, the 64-year-old came up with a surprise solution.
“He said to Chelsea, ‘Let’s get a top quality coaching staff in place and then I will manage from a distance and once the Turkish Euro 2012 qualifying campaign is finished [in October], I will be hands on',” the source added. “At the beginning he would have been a quasi-director of football and once his contract with Turkey ended he would be the manager.”
Much as Abramovich was keen to appoint the man who had been advising Chelsea informally for the previous two years, he would not take the risk of Turkey qualifying for Euro 2012 or the club’s central coaching figure being absent during the opening six weeks of the season.
The source explained: “If Turkey had qualified for the Euros, Hiddink would have stuck with Turkey for the season and managed Chelsea from a distance, which Roman could not risk that happening.
“Hiddink was disappointed as this would have been his final stand as a manager. He knows deep inside that there would have been a great chance of being successful because of all the players and all the money and the fact the other leading Premier League coaches are not tactical whizz kids.”
Chelsea is the only club managerial post that has attracted the in-demand Hiddink in recent times, predominantly because of his strong relationship with Abramovich. Inter and Juventus both approached the Dutchman about taking over this year but were unable to persuade him to return to day-to-day coaching.
Manchester City also made a monstrous offer to Hiddink in July 2010 at a meeting in London with a delegation led by club owner Sheikh Mansour.
City offered Hiddink £1 million-a-month after tax to succeed Roberto Mancini, equivalent to an eye-watering £462,000-a-week, which not only would have made him the highest paid coach or player in the world but, in basic salary terms, the top paid figure in football.
Yet, had a remarkable proposal by Guus Hiddink been better received by Roman Abramovich seven weeks ago then Villas-Boas would be barking out instructions from the touchline at Guimares tomorrow in a Porto tracksuit.
Goal.com can reveal for the first time how close Hiddink came to being appointed the Chelsea manager in mid-June and the lengths the Dutchman was prepared to go to rejoin the club he led during a caretaker spell two years previously.
An agreement had been reached between Chelsea, Hiddink and his employer the Turkish Football Federation (TFF) in mid-June for the most successful Dutch manager in history to succeed Carlo Ancelotti.
But the spanner in the works was the TFF president election, which was held on June 28. Mahmut Ozgener, the former president and Hiddink’s top ally at the Federation, had indicated a fortnight before the summit that he would stand down from his post, which resulted in a vacuum of power at the organisation.
“Everything was in place for Hiddink to go to Chelsea but no-one at the TFF was prepared to take the responsibility to negotiate with Chelsea and release Hiddink from his contract,” a source close to the negotiations told Goal.com. “If there had been a president, then it would have been a lot easier."
With Abramovich keen to have a new manager in place immediately and Hiddink unwilling to end a proud record of honouring his contracts by resigning at the twilight point of his career, the 64-year-old came up with a surprise solution.
“He said to Chelsea, ‘Let’s get a top quality coaching staff in place and then I will manage from a distance and once the Turkish Euro 2012 qualifying campaign is finished [in October], I will be hands on',” the source added. “At the beginning he would have been a quasi-director of football and once his contract with Turkey ended he would be the manager.”
Much as Abramovich was keen to appoint the man who had been advising Chelsea informally for the previous two years, he would not take the risk of Turkey qualifying for Euro 2012 or the club’s central coaching figure being absent during the opening six weeks of the season.
The source explained: “If Turkey had qualified for the Euros, Hiddink would have stuck with Turkey for the season and managed Chelsea from a distance, which Roman could not risk that happening.
“Hiddink was disappointed as this would have been his final stand as a manager. He knows deep inside that there would have been a great chance of being successful because of all the players and all the money and the fact the other leading Premier League coaches are not tactical whizz kids.”
Chelsea is the only club managerial post that has attracted the in-demand Hiddink in recent times, predominantly because of his strong relationship with Abramovich. Inter and Juventus both approached the Dutchman about taking over this year but were unable to persuade him to return to day-to-day coaching.
Manchester City also made a monstrous offer to Hiddink in July 2010 at a meeting in London with a delegation led by club owner Sheikh Mansour.
City offered Hiddink £1 million-a-month after tax to succeed Roberto Mancini, equivalent to an eye-watering £462,000-a-week, which not only would have made him the highest paid coach or player in the world but, in basic salary terms, the top paid figure in football.