Ross Barkley

What we thinking Blues? Perfect replacement for Yaya?

Always thought Pogba would be, but you never know behind the scenes. Personality/attidute etc
 
Ross Barkley is a target for Manchester City next summer with the champions valuing the midfielder at around £30m and viewing him as among a select few English homegrown players who could slot instantly into their team. City also hope Joe Hart and James Milner will sign the new deals they have been offered.

City were interested in buying Barkley in the close season but would not countenance paying Everton’s asking price of £50m. There is a recognition many of Manuel Pellegrini’s squad are at their peak so the need to start building for the future is pressing.

To do so, City require players who are either already established players of the quality of Yaya Touré, David Silva, Sergio Agüero, Vincent Kompany, Hart, Samir Nasri and Edin Dzeko, or have the potential to be so, as with Eliaquim Mangala, who is 23 and cost £32m during the summer.

With the Premier League and Uefa demanding clubs should have eight homegrown footballers in their squads for their respective competitions, City have found it a challenge to find English players of the requisite quality. In recent seasons Adam Johnson, Jack Rodwell and Scott Sinclair were all bought to fill the berths, while Micah Richards was at the club from a young age. All have left City apart from Sinclair who remains on the fringes of the first team.

Although the signings of Johnson, Rodwell and Sinclair are viewed as errors of judgment – Richards has also disappointed and is on loan at Fiorentina – there is a belief that Barkley is a far better player who can one day replace the 31-year-old Touré, 11 years Barkley’s senior.

Before firming up their interest in Barkley during the summer, City did detailed background checks on the England international and were encouraged by the results. The club’s information showed Barkley is intent on a successful career and has a winning mentality.

When Pellegrini informed the City hierarchy Barkley was good enough to help the club to win more Premier League titles and to claim a first European Cup, inquiries were made at Everton. Though City valued Barkley at £20m, they were prepared to pay a premium of over £30m to secure his signing but Bill Kenwright, the Everton chairman, quoted a price of £50m for the midfielder, and City decided to put their interest on hold.

However, despite Everton’s valuation it is believed they will sell next summer with the price thought to be negotiable. Barkley, who is sidelined because of a knee injury, signed a four-year contract worth around £60,000 a-week in July, a deal he was offered by the club as they sought to strengthen their bargaining position.

While City believe that there is a paucity of English talent, they believe within three years – and possibly even two – their academy will yield such players. There is even confidence at the club they have an 11-year-old on the books who can be better than Lionel Messi.

The development of their own players is viewed as a long-term plan that should offer a continual supply to the first team. The club’s Etihad Campus training complex, which is situated across the road from the stadium, is due to be opened next month.

After a number of Pellegrini’s players signed fresh deals, the club have started discussions with Hart and Milner over contracts. Hart, 27, is in the final two years of his deal. Milner, who was among City’s standout performers in Sunday’s 1-1 draw with Chelsea at the Etihad Stadium, has less than 12 months remaining
 
FantasyIreland said:
Ross Barkley is a target for Manchester City next summer with the champions valuing the midfielder at around £30m and viewing him as among a select few English homegrown players who could slot instantly into their team. City also hope Joe Hart and James Milner will sign the new deals they have been offered.

City were interested in buying Barkley in the close season but would not countenance paying Everton’s asking price of £50m. There is a recognition many of Manuel Pellegrini’s squad are at their peak so the need to start building for the future is pressing.

To do so, City require players who are either already established players of the quality of Yaya Touré, David Silva, Sergio Agüero, Vincent Kompany, Hart, Samir Nasri and Edin Dzeko, or have the potential to be so, as with Eliaquim Mangala, who is 23 and cost £32m during the summer.

With the Premier League and Uefa demanding clubs should have eight homegrown footballers in their squads for their respective competitions, City have found it a challenge to find English players of the requisite quality. In recent seasons Adam Johnson, Jack Rodwell and Scott Sinclair were all bought to fill the berths, while Micah Richards was at the club from a young age. All have left City apart from Sinclair who remains on the fringes of the first team.

Although the signings of Johnson, Rodwell and Sinclair are viewed as errors of judgment – Richards has also disappointed and is on loan at Fiorentina – there is a belief that Barkley is a far better player who can one day replace the 31-year-old Touré, 11 years Barkley’s senior.

Before firming up their interest in Barkley during the summer, City did detailed background checks on the England international and were encouraged by the results. The club’s information showed Barkley is intent on a successful career and has a winning mentality.

When Pellegrini informed the City hierarchy Barkley was good enough to help the club to win more Premier League titles and to claim a first European Cup, inquiries were made at Everton. Though City valued Barkley at £20m, they were prepared to pay a premium of over £30m to secure his signing but Bill Kenwright, the Everton chairman, quoted a price of £50m for the midfielder, and City decided to put their interest on hold.

However, despite Everton’s valuation it is believed they will sell next summer with the price thought to be negotiable. Barkley, who is sidelined because of a knee injury, signed a four-year contract worth around £60,000 a-week in July, a deal he was offered by the club as they sought to strengthen their bargaining position.

While City believe that there is a paucity of English talent, they believe within three years – and possibly even two – their academy will yield such players. There is even confidence at the club they have an 11-year-old on the books who can be better than Lionel Messi.

The development of their own players is viewed as a long-term plan that should offer a continual supply to the first team. The club’s Etihad Campus training complex, which is situated across the road from the stadium, is due to be opened next month.

After a number of Pellegrini’s players signed fresh deals, the club have started discussions with Hart and Milner over contracts. Hart, 27, is in the final two years of his deal. Milner, who was among City’s standout performers in Sunday’s 1-1 draw with Chelsea at the Etihad Stadium, has less than 12 months remaining
Just how well does that article read? In so many respects :-)

It's not by Ian Herbert is it? ;-)
 
Mark Ogdens take...............


Manchester City will attempt to sign Ross Barkley next summer after refusing to accept Everton’s £50 million valuation of the England midfielder at the end of last season.


The average age of City’s first-team squad is 28.9, the oldest in the Premier League, and efforts are being made to recruit younger players capable of sustaining the club’s recent success.


Barkley, sidelined until November with a medial knee ligament injury, is regarded by senior City figures as the outstanding, emerging English talent, and capable of challenging for a first-team place in Manuel Pellegrini’s cosmopolitan squad.


Inquiries about Barkley, 20, before the World Cup finals resulted in Everton insisting that any offers for the Liverpool-born player would have to start at £50 million – a figure regarded as excessive by Ferran Soriano, the City chief executive, and Txiki Begiristain, the director of football.


It is understood that, despite placing Barkley’s value in the region of £20  million, City would have been prepared to pay £30 million because they accept an “English premium” is payable on home-grown players in the Premier League.


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Barkley subsequently signed a £65,000-a-week, four-year contract at Goodison Park following his impressive performances during the World Cup finals. Everton are likely to fight any further attempts by City to prise the player away from Goodison Park.

However, with Begiristain and Pellegrini planning City’s next team, one which will be expected to challenge for the Champions League as well as maintain the club’s position in the Premier League, interest in Barkley will be intensified if he continues to progress on his return from injury.

Despite the average age of the squad, Pellegrini and Begiristain are relaxed about the process of re-shaping the playing staff, as only Martín Demichelis, Bacary Sagna and Yaya Touré have passed their 30th birthdays. They believe that the average-age issue can be resolved in one or two transfer windows by strategic purchases. The £32 million summer acquisition of Eliaquim Mangala from Porto is cited as proof of the club’s desire to recruit emerging players with a promising future.

Despite operating a policy during Roberto Mancini’s time as manager of attempting to sign the best young English talent, City now accept that mistakes were made during that period. The likes of Jack Rodwell, Adam Johnson and Scott Sinclair, lacked the quality to succeed at the highest level.

The inflated valuations of young English players have proven to be one of the biggest issues for City, however. The £16 million paid by Arsenal for the Manchester United forward Danny Welbeck is regarded as a rare example of realism in a market skewed by the figure quoted for Barkley and a similarly excessive £28 million fee paid by United for the Southampton teenager Luke Shaw.

While Pellegrini will be given money to spend in January should he decide that a fourth forward is required following Alvaro Negredo’s move to Valencia, City’s focus is primarily on next summer’s transfer market. Barkley is a central figure in those plans.

In the meantime, attentions will turn to securing the futures of Joe Hart and the midfielder James Milner. The club’s hierarchy is determined to reward both with new contracts.

Milner, who has expressed a desire to leave to pursue regular first-team football, may take some persuading to extend his contract, but an agreement with Hart is understood to be close to fruition, despite comments to the contrary by the goalkeeper over the weekend.

Meanwhile, City could extend Frank Lampard’s loan from the Major League Soccer club New York City FC until the end of January depending on the Americans’ training programme. The MLS season is due to start in March, so Lampard could continue with City until preparation week begins in New York, but a final decision has yet to be made on the 36-year-old midfielder’s return date.

Lampard, whose equaliser against Chelsea on Sunday earned City a 1-1 draw, insisted that the club could claw back Jose Mourinho’s league leaders. “Every point is important but we have had a tough start on paper,” Lampard said.

“We are further behind the leaders than a team like us would want to be, but we have had people coming back from the World Cup and it has been a funny start for us.

“Once we get a bit of flow and start to win games we can put a run together and get back up there – we deserve to be up there.”
 
proudbear said:
What we thinking Blues? Perfect replacement for Yaya?

Always thought Pogba would be, but you never know behind the scenes. Personality/attidute etc

either would be great, would help to reduce the average age, and they are exceptional players. Both .......... : ) that would give the manager a headache at team selection time and send out a signal to the rest of football.
 
FantasyIreland said:
Ross Barkley is a target for Manchester City next summer with the champions valuing the midfielder at around £30m and viewing him as among a select few English homegrown players who could slot instantly into their team. City also hope Joe Hart and James Milner will sign the new deals they have been offered.

City were interested in buying Barkley in the close season but would not countenance paying Everton’s asking price of £50m. There is a recognition many of Manuel Pellegrini’s squad are at their peak so the need to start building for the future is pressing.

To do so, City require players who are either already established players of the quality of Yaya Touré, David Silva, Sergio Agüero, Vincent Kompany, Hart, Samir Nasri and Edin Dzeko, or have the potential to be so, as with Eliaquim Mangala, who is 23 and cost £32m during the summer.

With the Premier League and Uefa demanding clubs should have eight homegrown footballers in their squads for their respective competitions, City have found it a challenge to find English players of the requisite quality. In recent seasons Adam Johnson, Jack Rodwell and Scott Sinclair were all bought to fill the berths, while Micah Richards was at the club from a young age. All have left City apart from Sinclair who remains on the fringes of the first team.

Although the signings of Johnson, Rodwell and Sinclair are viewed as errors of judgment – Richards has also disappointed and is on loan at Fiorentina – there is a belief that Barkley is a far better player who can one day replace the 31-year-old Touré, 11 years Barkley’s senior.

Before firming up their interest in Barkley during the summer, City did detailed background checks on the England international and were encouraged by the results. The club’s information showed Barkley is intent on a successful career and has a winning mentality.

When Pellegrini informed the City hierarchy Barkley was good enough to help the club to win more Premier League titles and to claim a first European Cup, inquiries were made at Everton. Though City valued Barkley at £20m, they were prepared to pay a premium of over £30m to secure his signing but Bill Kenwright, the Everton chairman, quoted a price of £50m for the midfielder, and City decided to put their interest on hold.

However, despite Everton’s valuation it is believed they will sell next summer with the price thought to be negotiable. Barkley, who is sidelined because of a knee injury, signed a four-year contract worth around £60,000 a-week in July, a deal he was offered by the club as they sought to strengthen their bargaining position.

While City believe that there is a paucity of English talent, they believe within three years – and possibly even two – their academy will yield such players. There is even confidence at the club they have an 11-year-old on the books who can be better than Lionel Messi.

The development of their own players is viewed as a long-term plan that should offer a continual supply to the first team. The club’s Etihad Campus training complex, which is situated across the road from the stadium, is due to be opened next month.

After a number of Pellegrini’s players signed fresh deals, the club have started discussions with Hart and Milner over contracts. Hart, 27, is in the final two years of his deal. Milner, who was among City’s standout performers in Sunday’s 1-1 draw with Chelsea at the Etihad Stadium, has less than 12 months remaining

That part excites and interests me massively. Anyone have any idea who?
 
A lot of people viewing Barkley as a Yaya replacement but he seems to play in an advanced role a lot for Everton. He can play deeper but is not a pass master type midfielder, so I'm not sure where he'd play. Would he:

Yaya/Fernando/Fernandinho <--- go into this set?

Silva/Navas/Nasri/Milner <--- or go into this set? (Milner could even move into the above set the way he's played)

Attacking midfield was his prevalent position last year: <a class="postlink" href="http://www.transfermarkt.co.uk/ross-barkley/leistungsdaten/spieler/131978/saison/2013" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;">http://www.transfermarkt.co.uk/ross-bar ... aison/2013</a>
 

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