Gazzetta: Sneijder completes €36m move to City (continued)

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salfordpaul said:
where can i read what the journo tweeted at 9 pm...can anyone provide a link please!?


Wesley Sneijder's extravagant pay demands apparently will prevent the Dutch international from completing his desired move to the Premier League.

Neither Manchester City nor Manchester United consider it viable to match the playmaker's £200,000 (Dh1.2 million) basic weekly wage at Inter Milan as well as paying a transfer fee of £30m to £35m to the Serie A club.

United ended their long-standing interest in Sneijder following a series of unsuccessful attempts to structure a financial package that would fit the player into their carefully controlled wage structure.

With Sneijder's after-tax salary standing at £5.25m and substantial bonuses on top, David Gill, the chief executive, has declared an end to the negotiations.

City also wanted Sneijder, entering discussions with the player's representatives about a transfer. Yet despite having a pay ceiling capable of accommodating Carlos Tevez's hefty salary, they have declared the overall cost of a move prohibitive and focused efforts elsewhere.

Yesterday's report in respected Italian daily Gazzetta dello Sport that City had agreed to pay €36m (Dh188m) for Sneijder surprised the player's agent, and was treated by City and United as an attempt by Inter to force the latter club's hand.

United, however, have never gone as far as discussing a transfer fee with the Italians.

Manchester City's principal target for a creative midfield berth remains Samir Nasri, who they believe could be extracted from Arsenal with an offer approaching £22m. City have already agreed terms with Nasri's representatives as well as substantial commissions on the transfer.

Though Arsene Wenger has blocked the sale to date, Arsenal's board are concerned Nasri will leave the club on a free transfer when his contract expires next summer.


The argument that they should take a profit on the 24 year old by selling now has gained traction with the player making himself unavailable for recent pre-season fixtures.

The club are also struggling to resolve their difficulties with another disgruntled midfielder, Cesc Fabregas. Arsenal's captain has barely trained with his teammates during a close season in which his attitude has been severely questioned.

While Wenger has accepted that it would be prudent to allow Fabregas to return to Barcelona, the Catalans' latest offer of an initial £26.1m plus a further £7m in performance-related variables has been rejected.

Arsenal are expected to invest part of the revenue from transfers on trying to sign the Spain forward Juan Mata. Though they missed a July 31 deadline to trigger a £20m buyout clause in Mata's contract, Valencia are expected to accept an offer in the region of £26m for the 23 year old.

While Mata is keen on a move to Arsenal he also harbours hopes that an indirect approach from United could turn concrete following their failure to land Sneijder.

Asked about United's approach for Sneijder last week, Ernesto Paolillo, the Inter chief executive said: "I'll repeat it; this is only spoken of in the newspapers, and we're not talking about it. He's an integral part of our team and ther
 
Rammyblues said:
SilvaLining wrote:
The entire wording of that article is painting the picture of Sneijder as a complete mercenary, more interested in his bank balance than anything else. Words like extravagant and substantial etc. If City do end up signing him, the media have their angle, started by this piece:

-Rags tried all they could with the different finance packages but Sneijder was being too greedy even after the rags put in ALL that effort

-We have a pay structure that can accommodate Tevez' 'hefty salary' whereas the rags have a 'carefully controlled wage structure' (of course no mention of Rooney's wage or alleged match highest earner clause), so if we do get him, we're ruining football whereas the rags are the bastions of prudence and financial responsibiity.

- All of which will result in the obvious, 'Sneijder cares more about money than playing for a team with 'history'

IMO, this article is really rather biased in favour of the rags, so aside from the whisperings from Zin, Damo and others, I would be inclined to take it with a very large shovel of salt.


TBF to him he has never denied it, always said if he left inter then he would demand in excess of 200K per week. The rags did everything they could to sign him, they tried the Barca way look at us with our history and tradition, Sneijder show me my money, so they went away and tried to help out his misses, sneijder show me the money, they tried to get extra sponsorship, Sneijder show me the money, so having been beaten by him on every aspect they distance themselves saying they have never bid. Shakin bacon always wanting to make it look for City "not in my lifetime" those words will come back to haunt him.

Yeah I agree mate, it just strikes me that this sort of sly bias against Sneijder's mercantile attitude didn't occur when the media were pushing hard for him joining the rags!
 
flb said:
There's an article on corriere dello sport quoting Branca-anybody get it on here translated-don't know how to do it with i phone !!!

"No contact with City".
 
Marco Branca (Inter): "There have been no negotiations with #mcfc, no contact. I haven't even received a phone call from Manchester."
 
moggymoz said:
salfordpaul said:
where can i read what the journo tweeted at 9 pm...can anyone provide a link please!?


Wesley Sneijder's extravagant pay demands apparently will prevent the Dutch international from completing his desired move to the Premier League.

Neither Manchester City nor Manchester United consider it viable to match the playmaker's £200,000 (Dh1.2 million) basic weekly wage at Inter Milan as well as paying a transfer fee of £30m to £35m to the Serie A club.

United ended their long-standing interest in Sneijder following a series of unsuccessful attempts to structure a financial package that would fit the player into their carefully controlled wage structure.

With Sneijder's after-tax salary standing at £5.25m and substantial bonuses on top, David Gill, the chief executive, has declared an end to the negotiations.

City also wanted Sneijder, entering discussions with the player's representatives about a transfer. Yet despite having a pay ceiling capable of accommodating Carlos Tevez's hefty salary, they have declared the overall cost of a move prohibitive and focused efforts elsewhere.

Yesterday's report in respected Italian daily Gazzetta dello Sport that City had agreed to pay €36m (Dh188m) for Sneijder surprised the player's agent, and was treated by City and United as an attempt by Inter to force the latter club's hand.

United, however, have never gone as far as discussing a transfer fee with the Italians.

Manchester City's principal target for a creative midfield berth remains Samir Nasri, who they believe could be extracted from Arsenal with an offer approaching £22m. City have already agreed terms with Nasri's representatives as well as substantial commissions on the transfer.

Though Arsene Wenger has blocked the sale to date, Arsenal's board are concerned Nasri will leave the club on a free transfer when his contract expires next summer.


The argument that they should take a profit on the 24 year old by selling now has gained traction with the player making himself unavailable for recent pre-season fixtures.

The club are also struggling to resolve their difficulties with another disgruntled midfielder, Cesc Fabregas. Arsenal's captain has barely trained with his teammates during a close season in which his attitude has been severely questioned.

While Wenger has accepted that it would be prudent to allow Fabregas to return to Barcelona, the Catalans' latest offer of an initial £26.1m plus a further £7m in performance-related variables has been rejected.

Arsenal are expected to invest part of the revenue from transfers on trying to sign the Spain forward Juan Mata. Though they missed a July 31 deadline to trigger a £20m buyout clause in Mata's contract, Valencia are expected to accept an offer in the region of £26m for the 23 year old.

While Mata is keen on a move to Arsenal he also harbours hopes that an indirect approach from United could turn concrete following their failure to land Sneijder.

Asked about United's approach for Sneijder last week, Ernesto Paolillo, the Inter chief executive said: "I'll repeat it; this is only spoken of in the newspapers, and we're not talking about it. He's an integral part of our team and ther

thanks for that pal! so to summarize, sneidjer is staying, yoonited have no cash after their 3 huge signings, mata will probably land at the arse!

great work to that journo!! he really isn t ITK!
 
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