Furman set to sign for SuperSport

Bafana Bafana captain Dean Furman is allegedly on the verge of signing for SuperSport United.

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Cape Town - Bafana Bafana captain Dean Furman is on the verge of signing for SuperSport United.

The Pretoria-based club is scheduled to make big announcement on live television on Wednesday evening - and it would appear that Furman is the subject of the broadcast.

Furman, who is a free agent after turning down a contract renewal with English League One team Doncaster Rovers, had said that he was keen to continue his career in Europe, and that the PSL wasn’t an option at this stage of his career.

In recent weeks, he trained at Blackburn Rovers in the English Championship and at another League One club, Bury, but nothing concrete materialised.

Now it seems that back home is his destiny, where the 27-year-old is expected to link up with coach Gordon Igesund, the man who handed the midfielder a Bafana debut, as well as a former teammate at Doncaster, Bongani Khumalo.

Furman was born in Camps Bay, but left the Mother City at a young age. He was initially in the youth academy of English giants Chelsea before going on to play for Glasgow Rangers, Bradford City and Oldham Athletic. His leadership ability also came to the fore at Oldham, where was handed the captain’s armband when just 23 years old.

The player’s imminent transfer to SuperSport affords him the opportunity for regular game-time, which suits his national ambitions, especially with Bafana looking to qualify for the 2016 Africa Cup of Nations and the 2018 World Cup.

Cape Argus



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Van Gaal backs Rooney to rise

Louis Van Gaal has tried to lift Wayne Rooney’s spirits as the misfiring striker prepares to lead the attack for Manchester United against Club Bruges.

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Louis Van Gaal has tried to lift Wayne Rooney’s spirits as the misfiring striker prepares to lead the attack for Manchester United against Club Bruges tonight.

Manager Van Gaal says it is the most high-pressure match of his Old Trafford reign, with a place in the Champions League group stage at stake over the two legs.

And the Dutchman’s concern over Rooney’s form was evident when he addressed his captain in front of team-mates as they boarded the United bus home after Friday night’s 1-0 win at Aston Villa.

Sportsmail understands that a disconsolate Rooney was already sitting alone with his head down after an abject performance in which he touched the ball just once in Villa’s penalty area in the whole 90 minutes.

That followed a below-par display against Tottenham on the opening day of the season.

Van Gaal urged Rooney to get his head up before telling him that he had played better games than he did against Villa. But Van Gaal also reassured the player that it is only a matter of time before things improve.

The manager, who reinstated Rooney as his target man following the departures of Robin van Persie and Radamel Falcao, insists that the England ace can return to being a 20-goal striker after playing in a deeper role for much of last season.

However, Rooney has not scored for United since early April and his displays this season have raised concerns, not least because United’s back-up options are Javier Hernandez, James Wilson and Adnan Januzaj, who was the matchwinner at Villa.

But Van Gaal backed his strikers yesterday when asked about the situation with Rooney.

‘I always have confidence in my players,’ he said. ‘We don’t only have Wayne Rooney in the striker’s position. We have Adnan Januzaj, who played in the USA (on tour) as a striker. I gave him that chance and he showed he can do that.

‘We have Chicharito (Hernandez) and James Wilson. I don’t think we have a lack of strikers.’

After starting the season with two wins, United are expected to see off the challenge from Bruges to reach the Champions League group stage.

United were excluded from Europe’s elite for the first time in 19 years last season, and Van Gaal knows there will be no excuses if it happens again.

Asked if these will be the biggest games of his time in charge of United, he replied: ‘Of course, because the players and the board and especially the fans want to participate in the Champions League.

‘There is a lot of pressure. It will be a difficult match and that is why the pressure is high.’

Unsettled goalkeeper David de Gea trained with the rest of the first-team squad yesterday but has been told by Van Gaal that it may only be a temporary move and to expect to work with the reserves again on certain days.

De Gea’s future is no closer to being resolved after centre back Sergio Ramos, the Real Madrid player wanted by United in exchange for their goalkeeper, signed a new contract at the Bernabeu yesterday. – Daily Mail



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Rodgers lauds Benteke

Liverpool manager Brendan Rodgers lauded Christian Benteke after the striker scored the winning goal against Bournemouth.

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Liverpool manager Brendan Rodgers said Christian Benteke gives his side a different dimension and hailed his performance against Bournemouth on Monday after the Belgian international scored on his home debut to make it two wins out of two in the Premier League.

Liverpool beat Bournemouth 1-0 after the 24-year-old, who signed from Aston Villa for 32.5 million pounds ($50.6 million) in the off-season, turned in midfielder Jordan Henderson's cross from close range midway through the first half.

“I thought he was a real handful, you saw all the facets of his game,” Rodgers said.

“His hold-up play is outstanding, he's got a wonderful touch for a big guy and you saw that this evening.

“Because of his physicality and contact, he keeps the ball alive in a dangerous area of the field,” the Northern Irishman added.

“It gives us a different dimension to our game, whilst looking to retain that philosophy to move the ball and get fluency.”

Benteke was pleased to mark his Anfield debut with a winning goal, but was equally happy with his team's second consecutive clean sheet.

“It was important for me on my debut at Anfield to score and help the team win,” he said.

Rodgers added his decision to replace Henderson early in the second half was due to the midfielder carrying a foot injury.

“He's had a problem with the bottom of his foot,” the manager told reporters in his post-match press conference.

“He hadn't trained for part of the week, he was taking some painkillers with it.

“He wanted to try it, he wanted to give it a go, but you could see he was limited in his running ... and unfortunately for him he was just in too much pain,” the manager said.

Liverpool will now travel to the Emirates stadium to take on Arsenal on Monday. – Reuters



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Bilbao end trophy drought

Athletic Bilbao claimed their first silverware in more than three decades when they wrapped up a 5-1 aggregate win over 10-man Barcelona to win the Spanish Super Cup.

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Barcelona - Athletic Bilbao claimed their first silverware in more than three decades when they wrapped up a 5-1 aggregate win over 10-man Barcelona to win the Spanish Super Cup on Monday and unleash ecstatic celebrations in the Basque city.

Bilbao, who only field players of Basque origin, last secured a major trophy when they won Spain's traditional season opener in 1984 and Friday's 4-0 drubbing of the Spanish and European champions in the first leg at the San Mames left Barca with too much to do at the Nou Camp.

After waves of sustained pressure, Lionel Messi gave the home side a 1-0 second-leg lead shortly before halftime when he chested down a clever Luis Suarez layoff and clipped a close-range volley into the net.

Barca's hopes suffered a blow 10 minutes into the second half when centre back Gerard Pique was shown a straight red card after he strode angrily over to the side of the pitch and shouted in the referee's assistant's face to protest a decision.

The incident seemed to give Barca renewed energy and Pedro and Ivan Rakitic immediately had chances to make it 2-0 before Suarez fired wildly over when through on the left.

However, the home defence left a gaping hole at the back 16 minutes from time and Aritz Aduriz, who netted a hat-trick in the first leg, was able to score at the second attempt past Claudio Bravo sending the travelling fans inside the giant arena into raptures.

Not even a late red card for substitute Kike Sola could tarnish Bilbao's joy as they ended Barca's hopes of repeating their 2009 feat when they won all six competitions they contested: the Champions League, La Liga, the King's Cup, the European Super Cup, the Spanish Super Cup and the Club World Cup.

“If you wrote the script it's impossible it would turn out like this,” an emotional Aduriz said in an interview with Spanish television.

“For us, for what it means to win a title for Bilbao, it's the greatest thing that could happen and against Barca as well,” he added.

“We have to compete against the rest of the world and it's an incredible thing.”

Barca need to recover quickly for Sunday's trip to face Bilbao again in their opening La Liga match of the campaign, when they begin their bid for a sixth title in eight years. – Reuters



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Benteke goal lifts Liverpool

Bournemouth are still waiting for their first English Premier League points after losing to Liverpool.

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London - Promoted Bournemouth are still waiting for their first Premier League points after succumbing to a controversial Christian Benteke goal in a 1-0 defeat at Liverpool on Monday.

Belgian forward Benteke, playing his second Liverpool game following his big-money close-season transfer from Aston Villa, scored the game's only goal in the 26th minute despite Philippe Coutinho's involvement from an offside position.

Bournemouth had earlier had a goal ruled out, rather unluckily, and the south coast side impressed with their willingness to attack at every opportunity.

Liverpool joined Manchester City, Manchester United and Leicester City on six points from two games but James Milner said the new boys had given them a stern test.

“We knew it'd be tough against a team that have just come up,” Milner told Sky Sports.

“They lost their first game but they had a positive performance and we knew it'd be tough. They're a good team, they play football, they like to press high.

“We know we can play better but it's two wins out of two and there's still room for improvement.”

Bournemouth scored 98 goals in winning promotion last season and their refreshing, attacking intent contributed to an exciting opening to the game.

Having failed to score in their first-ever top flight game against Villa last week, Bournemouth were unlucky to have Tommy Elphick's header ruled out for a foul on Dejan Lovren.

Liverpool then began to assert their authority but their goal should not have been allowed.

Jordan Henderson's teasing cross evaded everyone - including the desperate lunge of Coutinho who was clearly lingering in an offside position - before Benteke converted his 12th goal in 13 league matches at the far post.

Henderson nearly added a spectacular second minutes later but his dipping shot clipped the crossbar before Coutinho flashed a good chance past the post.

As in the first half, Bournemouth started the second period strongly with Matt Ritchie going close on three occasions with a series of rasping long-range shots.

Liverpool handed an Anfield debut to attacking midfielder Roberto Firmino but the Brazilian made little impact following his introduction in the 70th minute.

Bournemouth continued to press for an equaliser but Benteke should have doubled Liverpool's advantage, scuffing a close-range shot against the crossbar in added time.

Liverpool, one of four teams to win their opening two fixtures, travel to Arsenal next while Bournemouth, who have yet to score in their opening two matches, visit West Ham United.

REUTERS



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Top ten Mourinho excuses

Jose Mourinho has always been known for trying deflect attention from his teams when they’ve under-performed.

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After a devastating 3-0 defeat by Manchester City, Chelsea manager, José Mourinho, was quick to cast the blame on everything else except his team's performance. Mourinho described the defeat as a ‘fake’ result.

The defeat was the last thing Mourinho needed following last week’s fiasco with the Chelsea medical team against Swansea. Mourinho has always been known for trying deflect attention from his teams when they’ve under-performed.

Below is a list of Mourinho's top 10 excuses for non-performance.



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United feeling CL pressure - Van Gaal

Manchester United are feeling the pressure ahead of their Champions League qualifier against Club Bruges on Tuesday.

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London - Manchester United are feeling the pressure ahead of their Champions League qualifier against Club Bruges on Tuesday, according to manager Louis van Gaal.

The Dutchman, who has guided his team to two successive Premier League wins at the start of the season, is expecting a difficult first leg against the Belgians at Old Trafford as United try to return to the group stages of the competition.

“There is a lot of pressure because our aim and goal is to reach the Champions League,” Van Gaal told a news conference on Monday.

“These kind of matches are difficult. Bruges can defend very well and they can also attack.”

United, European Cup champions three times, will be without England defender Phil Jones because of what the manager described as “not an injury, more of an illness, and it is getting better”.

Belgian international Marouane Fellaini, who is serving a suspension in the Premier League, is set to return to boost an attack in which England captain Wayne Rooney has struggled as a lone striker in 1-0 wins over Tottenham Hotspur and Aston Villa.

Van Gaal said he was surprised by the widespread concerns expressed about Rooney's form.

“I think all the media has written for one year that I have to put him in the striker's position,” added the Dutchman. “It is amazing that after two matches you are doubting your own opinion.”

United were not involved in the Champions League last season, having failed to qualify when they finished seventh in the Premier League in 2013-14.

“We have a long way to go this season but we have had a better start than last year and also two clean sheets,” said Van Gaal. “I have confidence that we will develop ourselves to a much higher level.”

Asked about the mental state of Spanish goalkeeper David De Gea, who has not been selected yet this season, he refused to supply an answer.

“It is not a good question,” he said. “I don't answer the question.”

Van Gaal has indicated that he will not pick the 24-year-old De Gea, who has been linked with a move to Real Madrid, until the transfer window closes next month. – Reuters



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Issues Chelsea need to address

Chelsea's one-sided 3-0 loss away to Manchester City left the defending champions five points below their opponents.

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Chelsea's one-sided 3-0 loss away to Manchester City on Sunday left the defending champions five points below their opponents in 16th place in the nascent Premier League standings.

The season may be only two games old, but Chelsea already appear to be in difficulty, having failed to record a win in their opening two league games for the first time since 1998.

Here, AFP Sports lists five issues that will be troubling Chelsea's fans ahead of this weekend's trip to West Bromwich Albion, where they lost 3-0 on their last visit:

Mourinho on edge?

Chelsea manager Jose Mourinho wrote the book on diversionary tactics, but the spikiness with which he has attacked the new season suggests that all is not well behind the scenes at Stamford Bridge. It is only mid-August and he has already launched barbs at Everton manager Roberto Martinez, his old Arsenal adversary Arsene Wenger and City manager Manuel Pellegrini, made a cruel jibe about Rafael Benitez and demoted two of his medics, Eva Carneiro and Jon Fearn, after they angered him by running on to treat Eden Hazard during the 2-2 draw with Swansea City. He may have signed a new contract on the eve of the season, but Chelsea fans who remembered how Mourinho's first spell at the club unravelled acrimoniously in 2007 will hope that his mood improves quickly.

Leaky defence

Chelsea boasted the league's stingiest defence in the first two seasons following Mourinho's return from Real Madrid, but the sight of Sergio Aguero repeatedly strolling through their back line at the Etihad Stadium showed the extent to which it has become an area of concern. “I've never seen them so disorganised,” said Sky Sports pundit Gary Neville. Mourinho said that John Terry's unceremonious half-time withdrawal had merely been a means by which to add more pace - in the form of Kurt Zouma - to his floundering back four, but it may also have been intended as a message to Chelsea's directors to step up their pursuit of Everton's John Stones.

Faltering Ivanovic

No player has symbolised Chelsea's problems more in their opening two league games than right-back Branislav Ivanovic. A Stamford Bridge stalwart for the last six seasons, the Serbian was left chasing shadows by Swansea's Jefferson Montero and was at fault for City's second and third goals, being out-jumped by Vincent Kompany at a corner and then presenting the ball straight to Fernandinho. The arrival of Ghana left-back Abdul Rahman Baba from Augsburg may offer a chance to take the 31-year-old out of the spotlight, as it would give Mourinho the possibility of switching Cesar Azpilicueta to his preferred position of right-back.

Ineffective Hazard

It says much that Hazard's most notable contribution to Chelsea's campaign so far has been the injury he sustained in the latter stages of the game against Swansea that launched the Carneiro/Fearn polemic. Last season's multiple Player of the Year, the Belgian winger has looked off the pace in the campaign to date, sleep-walking through pre-season and failing to make an impression against either Swansea or City. He squandered Chelsea's best chance of an equaliser at the Etihad, shooting too close to Joe Hart.

Lack of transfers

Chelsea's close-season transfer dealings in 2014 were masterful, with Cesc Fabregas, Diego Costa, Filipe Luis and Didier Drogba all arriving before the end of July, giving Mourinho time to shape his new-look team. This year, Chelsea have not materially strengthened, having merely replaced the outgoing Petr Cech, Luis and Drogba with Asmir Begovic, Rahman and Radamel Falcao. A new centre-back is a priority, but Chelsea also look light in attack, where the champions are unhealthily reliant on Costa and his troublesome hamstrings. Falcao and Loic Remy do not pose anything like the same goal threat and Juan Cuadrado, a £23.3 million ($36.4 million, 32.9 million euros) signing from Fiorentina in January, has been a major disappointment. – AFP



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Rooney has lost his spark

There was something deeply troubling about Wayne Rooney’s performance at Villa Park on Friday.

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It was only one game, and Manchester United won it anyway, but even so there was something deeply troubling about Wayne Rooney’s performance at Villa Park on Friday.

One touch inside the opposing penalty area in over 90 minutes, and that to kick the ball into touch to waste time, having chased it fruitlessly down a channel. No shots at goal, no chances, no impact whatsoever, really.

Rooney can have these fallow spells, but they are usually brief. After getting two goals against Newcastle on Boxing Day last year he didn’t score again until February 16, a run of nine games. He is currently on eight games of blanks for Manchester United, dating back to a goal against Aston Villa on April 4. The difference being he is now the club’s primary forward.

Before, there were others to help shoulder the burden: Robin van Persie, Dimitar Berbatov, Carlos Tevez, Cristiano Ronaldo. This time it is Rooney’s one-man show in what is his 14th season as a professional footballer. Including internationals, he has never played fewer than the 42 games that marked his first year with Everton. He is 30 on October 24. That workload is going to tell eventually.

As England captain there is no respite, so he will chase Sir Bobby Charlton’s goalscoring record again next month, despite the match in San Marino — and even the one at home to Switzerland, considering the state of the group — being as meaningless as it gets at international level.

Is Roy Hodgson worried? Is Louis van Gaal? They should be.

Against Villa, Rooney looked as ineffectual as he has ever been. Only once in his professional career — even as a teenager at Everton — has he gone more than nine games without scoring: in his first full season with Manchester United, a stretch of 12 matches between December 31, 2005 and February 18, 2006. Barren runs of eight or nine games are fingers-of-one-hand rare, so to have two in a calendar year — even taking into account his change of role last season — is disturbing.

Does Van Gaal even know his best position any more? Every time Rooney finds a new role, the club invest heavily in that area. He plays No 10, support striker or high attacking midfield: United pay top money for Juan Mata, Angel di Maria, Memphis Depay, Ashley Young and, possibly, Pedro, who can all play there, too. On Friday the job even went to Adnan Januzaj.

Last season Van Gaal was convinced he was a midfield player but that didn’t stop him buying Morgan Schneiderlin and Bastian Schweinsteiger to go with Ander Herrera, Daley Blind and Michael Carrick. So it is into the forward line again for Rooney.

But has he got the sharpness for it, having played 663 games and counting before his 30th birthday? That is an almost impossibly heavy load. Turning 30 on November 29, 2003, Ryan Giggs, the most exceptional footballer- athlete of the modern era, had played 606 times. Rooney will be close to two seasons ahead of him, in game time.

And he’s not Giggs. We know that. He is built differently, he has lived differently, he takes longer to recover from injury and, at his best, combines exceptional talent with bruising, often brutal physical commitment. Giggs did his shift until the day he retired, but it wasn’t the same one that Rooney puts in.

Some who know Rooney well fear he is near to the tipping point. He is a thoroughbred with the ethic of a dray horse and looks increasingly exhausted by it. Van Gaal must be careful from here. Going it alone for a whole season at United might leave Rooney ready for little more than the glue factory. – Daily Mail



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Time catching up with Terry

Chelsea manager Jose Mourinho substituted captain John Terry at half-time during their clash against Manchester City.

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John Terry was out of the picture at the moment when the reality of his 34 years must have coursed through him like a lightning bolt.

His instincts had told him to head out of his penalty area to deal with the elusive presence of David Silva. And it was from there that he viewed the dreadful, yawning reality of the game's decisive moment: the chest-cushioned control by Sergio Aguero of Yaya Touré's return pass, the Argentine's weight transfer and swivel towards goal and, as Terry raced back to make amends, the side-footed finish. He was too late. Several seconds too late.

Terry said in pre-season, when his manager's pursuit of Everton's John Stones became so transparent, that he was “not naive enough” to consider himself irreplaceable and that he needed to maintain the form of last season, when he played every minute of Chelsea's Premier League campaign. “I know that if I don't, the manager will take me out of the side and replace me,” he observed. That kind of talk is cheap when no notion lurks of what we witnessed yesterday: Terry emerging from the interval to sit in a dugout, with a face that told a thousand stories, after Jose Mourinho had broken the habit of a working lifetime and substituted him in a Premier League game.

Defenders will tell you that age does not creep up on you at such a remorseless level of football as this. It simply hits you like a juggernaut. For Gary Neville there was half-time in the away dressing room at West Bromwich Albion on New Year's Day 2011, Sir Alex Ferguson barking out instructions on how to improve on a dire first-half performance, and that particular 35-year-old sitting in the toilet, reflecting on having made “Jerome Thomas look like Ronaldo,” as he described it later. He wanted to be out of that godforsaken place. “Yes, it comes out of nowhere,” says The Independent columnist Danny Higginbotham, who has lived through the experience, too.

This may not be such a defining moment as all that for Terry, the outstanding Premier League centre-half of last season, but it was notice of the challenge these next nine months will represent. Mourinho's description of the “fragility” of Chelsea's defence - a word he used twice in his press conference - will have cut Terry all over again when he read it last night. Just like the manager's response to whether what had just happened on the pitch outside was the worst he had seen in his two Chelsea reigns. “Defensively?” Mourinho replied. “I don't know…”

There have been few 45 minutes quite like that for the captain; City operating with a pace and sense of intent that made them unrecognisable from the side of last season. Terry was not the only one who bled. Gary Cahill was the one Aguero sluiced as he navigated a course through the Chelsea area to open the scoring. But from the game's first knockings - no more than its 10th second - it was as torrid for Terry as it gets for the older man, Silva measuring a ball inside of him through the left channel, leaving Terry with a sprint after the No 10 jersey. It evaporated away from him, way out of range.

The Raheem Sterling component to the challenge was even less predictable. The 20-year-old's early suggestions that £49m will not look such a lot of money come May were born out of his movement off the ball as much as his time on it. Sterling drifted around the front line, seeking out the small pockets of space, leaving both Terry and Cahill looking unsure at times whether to leave or follow. Even when a decision could be taken, the impact was uncertain. Terry's leap to make a headed interception from one of Aleksandar Kolarov's several well-measured crosses, just beyond the 20-minute mark, connected with fresh air. Aguero seemed as surprised as anyone. The ball hit his heel and went wide.

Mourinho's explanation of all this was one heap of contradictions. It had been the need to play a higher defensive line which had prompted Terry's half-time withdrawal, he said. Yet there could be no disguising his frustration with the way the week's meticulous planning - the dimension of his management which divides Chelsea from the rest - had so immediately come apart at the seams. “When you are all week speaking about movements and [about] Aguero runs and [about] Aguero positions and [about] wingers coming from outside to inside and after 10 seconds Aguero is in the face of Begovic…” he said, not completing his sentence.

It was the first time since May 2013, against Aston Villa, that any Chelsea manager had substituted Terry and not the kind of twist that will be music to the ears of Everton and Roberto Martinez, working resolutely to keep Stones from Stamford Bridge's clutches. If Stones had any doubts about his chances of challenging for a place immediately in west London, then this will have put them to rest.

For Mourinho, the early anxieties stretch beyond the evidence, also exploited by Swansea the week before, that his defence are vulnerable to the through ball delivered at pace. He will have sized up Manuel Pellegrini's City and wondered - like everyone else - where this early sense of menace has come from. Perhaps from having thrown off the millstone of defending the title, which City do not do well. Perhaps from the clear mind of a manager, Pellegrini, who figures that this will be his last season if he fails and might as well be bold. On a strictly tactical level, the shift from 4-4-2 to a 4-2-3-1 has added ballast.

Terry did not stop to discuss the afternoon as he left the Etihad last night. The difficulty with these moments is to deal with the searing scrutiny that they always bring. It is not a Neville moment. There will certainly be more imperious performances ahead. But when a weakness is discerned in the Premier League, the drive to exploit it is remorseless. The captain's season will be a long one.

Match in numbers

1

This was the first league game in which Mourinho has substituted Terry

70

It took 70 minutes for Chelsea to post their first shot on target

2013

Kompany scored in back-to-back PL games for the first time since December 2013 – The Independent



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Ramos signs new Real contract

Real Madrid’s Sergio Ramos has ended speculation surrounding his future by signing a new five-year deal with the Spanish giants.

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Real Madrid captain Sergio Ramos has ended speculation surrounding his future by signing a new five-year deal with the Spanish giants, the club confirmed on Monday.

Ramos had been courted by Manchester United during a standoff in negotiations between his representatives and Madrid president Florentino Perez over the Spanish international's salary with his previous deal set to expire in 2017.

However, the club said in a statement he will remain “tied to the club for the next five seasons.”

Both Ramos and Perez will appear at a press conference to mark the renewal at 1:30pm local time (1130GMT) at the club's Santiago Bernabeu stadium.

According to Spanish media reports, Ramos will earn up to 10 million euros ($11.1 million, £7.1 million) a season.

United and Madrid have been locked in transfer talks all summer with Real still hopeful of landing Ramos's international teammate David de Gea before the transfer window closes at the end of the month.

Ramos is now Madrid's longest serving player having signed from Sevilla 10 years ago as a 19-year-old and will be club captain for the first time this season after Iker Casillas's 18-year career at the Bernabeu came to an end when he joined Porto last month.

Despite holding an unwanted record as the Madrid player to have seen most red cards in the history of the club with a staggering 19 dismissals, Ramos is a hero amongst the Real support and is most fondly remembered for scoring the goal that saved Los Blancos from losing the 2014 Champions League final to local rivals Atletico Madrid.

His stoppage time header forced the game into extra-time where the white half of Madrid went onto dominate and run out 4-1 winners to complete his own personal repertoire of honours, which also includes three La Liga titles and two Copa del Reys as well as the World Cup and two European Championships at international level with Spain.

By committing to stay at the Bernabeu, Ramos has offered a huge lift to a Real side in need of a confidence boost ahead of the kick-off to the La Liga campaign next weekend.

Ramos was among a host of high-profile first-team players also including Cristiano Ronaldo and James Rodriguez who showed their discontent at the sacking of Carlo Ancelotti in May.

The appointment of Rafael Benitez as Ancelotti's successor was met with scepticism by the vast majority of the club's fans and Perez has unusually decided against the lavish signing of a “galactico” this summer, instead settling for a deeper and younger squad.

However, without the injured Ronaldo, Benitez's men have struggled in pre-season, failing to score in four of their seven friendlies so far.

Madrid begin their league campaign away to newly promoted Sporting Gijon on August 23. – AFP



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City loss was a fake result - Jose

Chelsea manager Jose Mourinho described his team's 3-0 Premier League defeat at Manchester City as a “fake” result.

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London - Chelsea manager Jose Mourinho described his team's 3-0 Premier League defeat at Manchester City on Sunday as a “fake” result.

But the reality, however much it hurts, is that Chelsea could hardly have made a more unconvincing start to the defence of their crown, on or off the pitch.

A Community Shield defeat by Arsenal was shrugged off as irrelevant, but something looked seriously amiss a week later in a fortunate 2-2 draw at home to Swansea City in which keeper Thibaut Courtois was red-carded.

That poor display was overshadowed by Mourinho's removal of club doctor Eva Carneiro from bench duty after describing her as “naive” for tending to Eden Hazard - leaving Chelsea temporarily reduced to nine men.

Worse was to follow on Sunday, though, as Mourinho suffered his joint-heaviest defeat as a Premier League manager.

A listless display at City's Etihad Stadium, particularly in the first half, allowed Chelsea's main title rivals to steal a march and move five points clear.

The biggest bombshell, however, was long-term captain and defensive colossus John Terry being substituted at halftime for tactical reasons - the first time Mourinho had ever taken his trusty skipper off in the heat of battle.

The only good news on Sunday was the signing of left back Abdul Rahman Baba from Bundesliga club Augsburg - a welcome recruit after a summer in which Chelsea failed to significantly upgrade last year's model.

So dominant last season when cruising to the title, Chelsea have looked under-cooked so far.

Not since 1998 have they failed to win either of their opening league games and while a five-point deficit on City with 108 more points to play for is no crisis - a return to form cannot come soon enough.

Yet Mourinho was having none of it after goals from Sergio Aguero, Vincent Kompany and Fernandinho sent City top.

“3-0 is completely fake,” Mourinho told reporters.

Speaking to Chelsea's TV channel later, he added: “In the second half we controlled every aspect of the game.

“Then one corner, one mistake and 2-0. The best team in the first half won and the best team in the second half lost.”

Terry's position in the team will dominate the week ahead as Chelsea prepare to face West Bromwich Albion.

“I had to decide on John or (Gary) Cahill because Zouma is the fastest player we have in our defensive line,” Mourinho explained of his decision to hook Terry.

“The point was not to bring John out but to bring Zouma in. I wanted to have my fastest player on the pitch.

“I'm the one that plays John every game, made him captain, brought him back from a difficult situation with other managers.” – Reuters



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Rodgers still has defensive issues

Liverpool have conceded more than 40 goals a season, which compares favourably with their rivals. It’s the manner in which they concede that is worrying.

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During a lengthy press conference ahead of Bournemouth's visit, Brendan Rodgers made a subtle but swift defence against an accusation levelled at him since he took charge at Liverpool. “I'm not dogmatic,” he claimed, reasoning that the recruitment of Christian Benteke was proof of this, the striker providing “variety” for his team.

It was Liverpool's attack that failed them last season: the difference between competing for the title and qualifying for the Champions League, or finishing sixth. If Benteke scores the goals that Mario Balotelli did not, Liverpool will be closer to where they want to be.

Rodgers admitted that his team have to improve in other areas as well. In his three campaigns, Liverpool have conceded more than 40 goals a season, which compares favourably with their rivals. It is the manner in which they have conceded that builds pressure on the team and, indeed, the manager.

Rodgers has yet to discover a reliable centre-half partnership. Faith in Daniel Agger began to ebb when he left marking duties on Romelu Lukaku to Glen Johnson in the Merseyside derby at Goodison Park in November 2013, despite being given the responsibility from set pieces. Lukaku scored twice in the 3-3 draw, one from a corner.

Rodgers favoured Mamadou Sakho for the rest of that season but the Parisian has since been struck down by a series of muscle injuries and it would be understandable if Rodgers followed the old Liverpool way of thinking when it came to his selection - that an injured player was not really a player at all.

Ian St John tells a brutal story about Jack Whitham, who signed for Liverpool in 1970 under Bill Shankly. “Training for Jack was like jogging in between injuries,” St John joked. “He was driving Shanks mad because he hated people who were like that. Finally he said one day to Jack, 'You, go up to the corner [where the pigsty was] and train up there. I don't want you to contaminate the rest of the team'.”

Liverpool rejected a loan offer from AS Roma for Sakho on Saturday. He might stay, but for the time being it seems Rodgers is planning to build his defence around Martin Skrtel and Dejan Lovren

“It's key in any team,” the manager said, “having players that can play consistently for you, especially in a back five - that's vital.” That includes Nathaniel Clyne, a right- back with rapid recovery and someone who can “smell the danger. We've got players that want to defend first and foremost, which is key to keeping clean sheets. From there you have the platform to play.”

Liverpool's defence might be supported by the presence of Emre Can in a holding midfield role. “I think his passing range, his strength, his power - it's best in midfield,” Rodgers said of Can.

The scorer of Liverpool's winner at Stoke, Philippe Coutinho, was then dropped from the Brazil squad for friendlies with Costa Rica and United States next month. Rodgers held a lengthy meeting with Coutinho after hearing of the decision.

“It's hard to understand,” Rodgers said. “He's a young player who made the team of the season in the most competitive league in the world. How he cannot be in the squad is incredible.”

Liverpool BournemouthOdds: Home 1-2 Draw 7-2 Away 13-2

Kick-off Tonight, 8pm (Sky Sports 1; highlights Sky Sports 1, 2.30am tomorrow)

Team news Liverpool could name an unchanged side from the win at Stoke last week, with Roberto Firmino pushing for a start after a hat-trick in a friendly this week. Joe Allen (hamstring) is out. Bournemouth are unlikely to make a large amount of changes from the loss against Aston Villa; Christian Atsu, Shaun MacDonald and Harry Arter remain out. – The Independent



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Palace win was crucial - Wenger

Arsene Wenger believes Arsenal's gritty 2-1 win against Crystal Palace will prove a significant moment in the Premier League title race.

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Arsene Wenger believes Arsenal's gritty 2-1 win against Crystal Palace will prove a significant moment in the Premier League title race.

Wenger's side could ill-afford another setback after their embarrassing opening day meltdown against West Ham and they rose to the challenge at Selhurst Park on Sunday.

Still haunted by last season's spluttering start, which he regards as the root cause of their failed title bid, Wenger was desperate to avoid being cast adrift of early pace-setters Manchester City because he feared the damage to his players' morale would be fatal.

Although they were still someway short of their best, the Gunners did enough to subdue a dangerous Palace outfit with a composed performance, prompting Wenger to hail the result as a huge moment in his club's season even at this early stage.

“We have shown a strong response. We have shown aspects of our game that are important in the Premier League,” Wenger said.

“When Palace came back to 1-1 we were tested after what happened last weekend. It was important to see how we responded because this is a difficult place to come. I'm sure they will beat many strong teams.

“It was a bit scary when we missed those chances. We are used to being punished after that which makes the three points more important.

“To get the points is already a bit of turning point because to lose would have been a big blow mentally.”

One of the key figures in Arsenal's strong finish to last season was Alexis Sanchez and the Chile winger's belated first start of the campaign, after an extended break following Copa America duty, brought an extra menace to the Gunners' attacks.

Wenger admitted Sanchez was still short of full fitness, but he was delighted with the Chilean's commitment, epitomised by his leaping header that led to Damien Delaney's own goal.

“He brings drive, he brings pressure on the opponent, he brings chances,” Wenger said.

“When it was 1-1 it is no coincidence that he found the header for the goal over Joel Ward. He is a fighter. It was more desire than fitness at this stage.

“He has had only two weeks' training but he still had the mental resources to score a vital goal for us.

“It's not a 100 per cent fit Sanchez but it's a 100 per cent motivated Sanchez and sometimes that's enough.”

Wenger also reserved special praise for Mesut Ozil, whose clever passing was allied to the kind of unstinting work rate he is sometimes criticised for lacking.

“Ozil had a very good performance, it is a pleasure to watch his passing and his intelligence,” Wenger said.

“The rest of his game was absolutely magnificent as well. He works harder than people think he does.

“He is not spectacular in his defending but he wants to help the team. What I want from him is a few more goals this season.”

While Wenger was relieved to get back on track, Palace manager Alan Pardew was left to rue what might have been if referee Lee Mason had sent off Francis Coquelin, the Arsenal midfielder who went unpunished despite making several crunching challenges while already on a booking.

“The foul before half-time is debatable but then he makes another foul after half-time and he should have gone. There was an immediate reaction because they took him off,” Pardew said.

“Arsenal were sharp and bright. They were a lot more intelligent in their passing than against West Ham, but we had better shape as the match went on and it might have been a different result if we'd got the second goal.” – AFP



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City thrash Chelsea

The Premier League season is only a week old but the problems are already piling up for misfiring champions Chelsea after a 3-0 thrashing at Manchester City.

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London - The Premier League season is only a week old but the problems are already piling up for misfiring champions Chelsea after a 3-0 thrashing at Manchester City on Sunday.

Goals by Sergio Aguero, Vincent Kompany and Fernandinho were the least City deserved for a dominant display against a side who took 70 minutes to register a shot on target.

While a buoyant City top the table with six points, six goals scored and none conceded, Chelsea have one point after failing to win either of their opening two fixtures for the first time since 1998.

Chelsea's troubles will not have gone unnoticed by Arsenal who belatedly got their season into gear with a 2-1 derby win at Crystal Palace - Damien Delaney's own goal sealing their first points of the season.

The sense of unease in the Chelsea camp was increased when talismanic skipper John Terry was substituted at halftime - the first time he had ever been hauled off by manager Jose Mourinho.

Mourinho later confirmed that Terry had been replaced by pacey central defender Kurt Zouma for tactical reasons.

The Portuguese caused controversy last week when criticising first-team doctor Eva Carneiro for treating Eden Hazard and leaving Chelsea temporarily with nine men in the opening day draw with Swansea City and he faces another testing week.

Mourinho was already on the offensive, though, saying Chelsea's defeat by City had been undeserved.

“The best team in the first half won the game. The best team in the second half was Chelsea for sure,” he told Sky Sports.

“Second half everything was different. If the 1-0 was a doubtful result at minute 70, 3-0 is completely fake.”

Chelsea did regroup well but his analysis was still puzzling.

“It was a comfortable game. To start the way we did today is definitely the right signal but there's still a lot to come,” City captain Kompany said.

Chelsea's 2-2 draw with Swansea came a week after defeat by FA Cup winners Arsenal in the Community Shield and was followed by Mourinho's removal of Carneiro from bench duties.

His team needed a response on Sunday but they were outplayed in the opening 45 minutes.

Aguero had already been causing Terry and central defensive partner Gary Cahill headaches and had three sights of goal in the opening 30 minutes before finally putting his side ahead.

The Argentine played a one-two with Yaya Toure in a crowded area, wriggled into space past a lumbering Cahill and fired the ball just inside Asmir Begovic's post.

Eliaquim Mangala should have made it 2-0 when he headed wide as Cahill was flattened by his own goalie. Tempers then flared as Fernandinho's elbow left a furious Costa bloodied.

Hazard had Chelsea's one real chance in the 70th minute but fired a shot straight at Joe Hart before City's defenders cleared the loose ball with Costa lurking.

Kompany's glancing header gave City breathing space before Branislav Ivanovic gave the ball away and Fernandinho completed Chelsea's misery with a clinical finish past Begovic, who could have expected more protection on his first start in place of the suspended Thibaut Courtois.

Arsenal had Alexis Sanchez back in their starting line-up and it was the Chile forward's 55th-minute header that was turned into his own net by Delaney as Arsenal responded to last week's home defeat by West Ham United.

“I'm very pleased with the three points. If we had gone two games and zero points it would be absolutely difficult, we knew this would be a tricky one,” Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger said.

Olivier Giroud had given the Gunners the lead with a smart volley in the 16th minute, only for Joel Ward to equalise against the run of play 12 minutes later. – Reuters



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