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Thứ Bảy, 14 tháng 11, 2015

Shock exit mooted for City ace

Martin Demichelis could be on his way out of Manchester City in January to join Argentine side Rosario Central, according to reports.
The 34-year-old central defender was snapped up by City boss Manuel Pellegrini on a two-year deal from Atletico Madrid in summer 2013, with the move coming only two months after he had moved to the Vicente Calderon from their Spanish La Liga rivals Malaga.

Demichelis endured an uncertain start to life in England, but managed to establish himself as a key man in the squad with 31 Premier League appearances last term.

But the arrival of fellow Argentinian Nicolas Otamendi from Valencia in the summer has now left Demichelis down in fourth spot in the pecking order, as skipper Vincent Kompany and Eliaquim Mangala are also ahead of him.

He has made just one start in the Premier League so far this term, while his other starts have come in the Capital One Cup and the Champions League.

And with just six months remaining on his deal, it is being reported that City could offload Demichelis in January, with Rosario coach Eduardo Coudet keen to take him back to his homeland.

Coudet played alongside Demichelis at River Plate and is a big fan of the defender, while he is also looking for a quality replacement to cover the void set to be created by Alejandro Donatti's expected departure in the new year.

Man City's Martin Demichelis may join Rosario Central in January - sources

Manchester City defender Martin Demichelis could be set for a return to Argentina with Rosario Central in January, sources have told ESPN FC.
Demichelis, 34, has fallen down the City pecking order following the arrival at the Etihad Stadium of fellow Argentine Nicolas Otamendi from Valencia in the summer.
Demichelis is currently fourth-choice centre-back in Manuel Pellegrini's plans, with Vincent Kompany, Otamendi and Eliaquim Mangala all ahead of him in the battle for a spot in the City starting XI.
He has made just one start in the Premier League this season, with his three other starts coming in the Capital One Cup and the Champions League.
The experienced defender is entering the final six months of his contract at the Etihad Stadium and could decide to return to his homeland after 12 years in Europe with Bayern Munich, Malaga and City, who signed him just two months after he had joined Atletico Madrid on a free transfer.
Rosario are in the market for a new defender with Alejandro Donatti expected to leave the club for a move to Europe in January.
Rosario coach Eduardo Coudet is a big admirer of Demichelis, having played alongside him while they were both together at River Plate, and hopes to persuade his former teammate to join the club in January ahead of the Copa Libertadores starting in February.

Competition for places can only be good for Manchester City, insists centre-back Eliaquim Mangala.

Manchester City defender Eliaquim Mangala is happy with the added competition fellow centre-back and summer signing Nicolas Otamendi has brought to the club.
Manuel Pellegrini added the Argentinean to his side's defensive options and it has meant Mangala has been dropped for certain matches – including Sunday's 0-0 draw with Aston Villa.
Captain Vincent Kompany, when fully fit, is almost guaranteed his place in the starting XI with Mangala, Otamendi and Martin Demichelis vying to partner the Belgian.
"Competition is good. I'm happy," Mangala said. "It's motivated me to improve step by step. When you are at one step, you want to keep going - to move further up.
"I want to improve every day in training and during the games. That's important for me.
"It's very good for us," he said about the situation. "I knew Martin and Vinnie from last season and I knew Nico at Porto. It's easier to play with them.
"We have some parts that are different. I think Nico and Martin are similar players - and the same with Vinnie and me - but we complement each other and that is very good for the team."

Why Vincent Kompany Will Spend Many More Seasons at Manchester City

By his own admission, Vincent Kompany’s form last season wasn’t good enough. If his performances since joining Manchester City from Hamburg back in 2008 have told us anything, it was that he is probably the best defender in the Premier League when fit and at the top of his game. In 2014/15, he wasn’t even close.
But there aren’t too many better professionals in the league, either. Kompany, irked by his collapse, barely had a summer holiday. He returned to City’s £150 million training base adjacent to the Etihad Stadium earlier than any other player and began preparing himself for a better campaign this time around.
“For me, to have a season like last season wasn’t acceptable, and I’ve done what I’ve always know when times were tough," he said in September, relayed by Anthony Jepson of the Manchester Evening News.
He continued:
I just got back to basics, worked even harder and I’ve come back stronger. Right now, what I see in this team which I haven’t seen—probably ever—is just a level of focus.
It’s probably because most of us have got so much to deal with in the past 12 months. Everyone knows we cannot afford ourselves a mental rest until we’ve finished the job.
So far, it would seem his hard work has paid off. His performances have been outstanding since August. City have kept seven clean sheets this season, and it’s certainly no coincidence Kompany has played in all of them.
Toward the end of last season, for the first time in his City career, Kompany was no longer first choice, with Eliaquim Mangala and Martin Demichelis comprising Manuel Pellegrini’s preferred pairing for the final weeks. He wanted to take Kompany out of the firing line, an opportunity for the Belgian to refocus and refresh himself. It was probably the right thing to do—another example of Pellegrini’s fine man-management skills.
But things have changed rapidly. Now, it’s the other defenders in City’s squad fighting for a place alongside the captain. Kompany has reasserted his authority and his ability. Right now it is new signing Nicolas Otamendi who finds himself in the side, and the two are developing an excellent understanding.
City have looked solid for much of the season, restricting their opponents to just 28 shots on target in their 12 league games.
You would be hard pushed to name a better pound-for-pound signing in City’s history than Kompany. He joined for £6 million in the summer of 2008—a rare piece of transfer brilliance from former manager Mark Hughes—and it quickly became apparent City had found themselves a magnificent footballer.
He played as a midfielder initially, but with City often looking weak at the back, Kompany was rightfully given a chance there. He excelled, and so began a rapid rise to prominence, soon becoming known as the best centre-back in English football.
It also didn’t take long for people to realise City had one of the best statesman in the game. Kompany doesn’t just lead on the pitch; he is also a wonderful orator and a man who has represented the club in the best possible way. No other Premier League side boasts a player who offered quite such a comprehensive package.
Injuries have certainly held him back and continue to do so. This season, he has already spent seven matches on the sidelines. His calves are susceptible to injury, something Pellegrini feels may well be down to his overzealous approach to training and games.
“Vincent plays with 100 per cent intensity, not just every game but every training session,” Pellegrini said prior to City’s recent match with West Ham United. “That’s the way he always works.
“It’s difficult [for him to ease off]. It is not easy for him. He tries sometimes not to be always 100 per cent intensity, but you cannot change.
“It is always important [not] to have injured players, especially the captain and especially in a moment when we didn’t concede any goals in the first five games. I think it is important to carry on playing with the same names, but I always say we have a squad.”
The 29-year-old still has plenty left to offer. Medical and dietary advancements mean players are going on longer than ever before declining. Centre-backs, in particular, seem to benefit from experience and flourish later.
And City, a club looking to nurture their own talent right across the board, will surely want him to continue his association with them after his playing career, either in a coaching capacity or a more ambassadorial role.
Everything is in place. City are no longer just a club based in east Manchester. The City Football Group (CFG) is a growing enterprise, with clubs across the world now bearing the City name and coloured sky blue.
Patrick Vieira is the most obvious case in point. The former Arsenal man, another hugely respected figure in the game, was given an ambassadorial role after his retirement from playing before being parachuted into the role of manager of City's elite development squad.
Now, with his career in need of further development Manchester City can’t offer him at this time, he has gone off to New York City, where he will be first-team manager. CFG has everything in place to help their former players progress in non-playing capacities.
Whether MLS proves to be the best place for Vieira to spread his wings remains to be seen, but City simply can’t lose. They retain his registration and get to continue monitoring his progress. Kompany, you feel, has surely been earmarked for similar treatment when he calls time on his playing career. 
Kompany remains a superb athlete. He has pace, strength and plenty of technical ability. He can dribble and play from the back, and he can defend in a proactive, aggressive style. At his best, he’s probably the finest centre-half in the English top flight.
But what City also have in Kompany is perhaps an even more valuable commodity: an intelligent, articulate leader who clearly loves the game. The end of his playing days almost certainly will not be the end of his association with the club.

Thứ Sáu, 13 tháng 11, 2015

Mangala Is the Man City Player with Most on the Line After International Break

International breaks usually go one of two ways: Either they stymie a team’s progress and cause an unwelcome distraction from club affairs, or they offer some respite and an opportunity for a side to regroup and refocus.
For Manchester City, international weeks must be filling staff at the Etihad with dread. During the last one, six weeks ago, City lost both Sergio Aguero and David Silva, their two best attacking players, and haven’t been able to call on them since. Aguero suffered a grade-two hamstring tear, while Silva was left nursing a ankle injury. Both have been big losses.
City manager Manuel Pellegrini, who has had to cope with a sizeable injury list throughout the season, will be hoping his squad comes back fit and healthy. The Chilean perhaps deserves more credit for the way his side have coped with the mass of injuries, with the club top of the Premier League, safely through to the Champions League last 16 and into the quarter-finals of the Capital One Cup.
For some players in the squad, it feels like a well-timed break. Eliaquim Mangala, who has lost his place in the City side to Nicolas Otamendi in recent weeks, will see it as an opportunity to change his environment and fight a different battle before returning to Manchester and trying to force his way into Pellegrini’s first-choice team.
He wants a place in France’s Euro 2016 squad, but it’s a nation blessed with plenty of talent. Laurent Koscielny and Mamadou Sakho are likely ahead of him in Didier Deschamps' thinking at the moment, but Mangala has played two full games for France already this season and looks to be firmly in the manager’s plans. It’s vital for him that this next get-together goes well.
It feels as though he has an important few weeks when he returns to his club, too. With City’s schedule becoming demanding, there will be chances to play in the coming weeks, and he needs to impress if he wants to reclaim the spot to the left of Vincent Kompany at the heart of City’s defence.
It’s been a strange season for Mangala, with clear improvement on the field but still no guaranteed place in Pellegrini’s starting XI.
He partnered Kompany when the season started and was part of a defence that kept five consecutive clean sheets. Kompany’s injury, though, brought instability, and a couple of momentary lapses of concentration saw Mangala culpable for goals.
He looked nowhere near as secure alongside Otamendi as he did when Kompany was in the side, and when the Belgian returned, Pellegrini opted to try Otamendi next to him. It’s worked well, with the £32 million signing from Valencia showing superb form and Kompany proving he is the best organiser and leader in the squad.
Man of the Match displays against Manchester United and Norwich City saw Otamendi's stock rise considerably, and at Aston Villa on Sunday, he and Kompany were again largely untroubled.
It's been something of a problem position for City in recent years, but it seems things are beginning to settle in defence. City have limited their opponents to just 28 shots on target this season—the lowest tally in the league.
All of which leaves Mangala needing to show patience. At 24, he has time on his side, but City invested significant funds to secure his signature and, ideally, would have wanted more from the Frenchman than they’ve had so far.
In terms of raw ability and natural attributes, he has everything he needs to be an excellent defender. Quick, strong and unfathomably athletic, Mangala is equipped for life at the top. With improved concentration and positional sense, he could be City's best defender. 
Coming back for the next break fit and focused on regaining his spot is imperative for the former Porto player. 
Rob Pollard is Bleacher Report's lead Manchester City correspondent and will be following the club from a Manchester base throughout the 2015/16 season. All quotes were obtained firsthand unless otherwise noted. Follow him on Twitter @RobPollard_.
 
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