Tuesday, 2 August 2011

Barclays Premier League 2011/2012 Preview

Rarely has the start of a new Premier League season thrown up so many conundrums.

Can Chelsea's new young manager, Andre Villas-Boas, convince Roman Abramovich that football clubs work best when the owner puts his hand in his pocket but stays out of team matters?

Will Manchester City kick on from winning the FA Cup, their first trophy under mega-rich owner Sheikh Mansour, and mount a realistic challenge for major prizes at home and in Europe?

Can Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger find a way of turning his side into something more than just the most eye-pleasing performers in English football?

Do Tottenham have the will and manager Harry Redknapp the nous to build on their Champions League quarter-final adventure last season?

Can Liverpool boss Kenny Dalglish continue his brilliant refurbishment at Anfield and restore the five-time champions of Europe to their former glory?

They are all questions which suggest we are in for one of the most competitive and unpredictable seasons in Premier League history.

Yet so many of the answers all hang on one club, Manchester United, and one man, Sir Alex Ferguson.

It is the season in which Ferguson will turn 70. The season which will mark his 25th year as supremo at Old Trafford. The season in which he could win United's 20th league title.

A season in which he has already warned the rest that, despite his age and his astounding accomplishments, there will be no let-up in his quest to put more trophies in the Old Trafford cabinet.

"It was Liverpool's time in the '80s, it's our time now," Ferguson said after he had pocketed his 12th Premier League title.

"There's a responsibility as the manager of Manchester United. It doesn't go away. I'm not going to take it easy because we won the title. Hopefully we'll be better next season. The only thing you can do at this club is win, that's all that matters.

"We have a responsibility and expectation to live up to and that carries on next season. As I've always said, Manchester United should accept a challenge. We're good at that and, next season, we'll accept anything that comes our way."

It was why Ferguson was no slouch in his scramble for reinforcements with Edwin van der Sar, Paul Scholes and Gary Neville all having retired.

A goalkeeper was a priority and 20-year-old David De Gea from Atletico Madrid looks a shrewd piece of business. Phil Jones from Blackburn will also bolster squad depth while England's Ashley Young, signed from Aston Villa, has the opportunity to elevate his career to a new level by giving United pace and trickery out wide and in forward areas alongside Wayne Rooney.

In truth, United have been in transition for a couple of years and last season they were carried by their home form, winning 18 of their 19 matches at Old Trafford and drawing the other.

They will miss the influence of Scholes and Van der Sar but they remain the team to beat.

Not that anyone should rule out Chelsea. Villas-Boas has a sharp mind. He is a disciple of Jose Mourinho. He has strength and experience at the core of his side. His challenge is coaxing the best out of an ageing team and getting Fernando Torres to play as he did 18 months ago and not as he has for the past 12 months.

If Villas-Boas can solve when, where and how to play Torres and Didier Drogba then Chelsea could yet prove to be the most powerful squad.

Manchester City, too, are likely to be more of a team than the individuals thrown together with indecent haste and obscene amounts of cash these past couple of years. Whether they have the depth and unity to fight on all fronts, including the Champions League, and win a major prize is uncertain. They still might be a season or two away from that.

As for Tottenham, Redknapp has an impossible job trying to recreate the thrills of the San Siro and the Bernabeu last season.

Liverpool could be the ones to watch. Dalglish has worked wonders in his time back in charge. Charlie Adam from Blackpool is an inspired snip of a signing at £6.75million, just the sort of inventive midfield force required to service strikers such as Andy Carroll and Luis Suarez.

They are a smart bet to regain their place in England's top four, probably at the expense of Arsenal.

At the other end the same old faithful, Wolves, Wigan and West Brom, are likely to be scrapping it out in one long relegation dogfight. Almost certainly they will be joined by the newly-promoted trio in the shape of Swansea, Norwich and QPR, the latter affording volatile manager Neil Warnock another crack at the Premier League following his controversial exit with Sheffield United in 2007.

It is going to be that sort of season. Tight and tense. Anything but dull. Yet, for all its unpredictability, at the end of it do not be surprised if the big domestic prize once again goes to Ferguson. Still leading the way after all these years.

German Bundesliga 2011/12 Season Preview

The Bundesliga, Europe’s best attended league, kicks off its 2011/12 campaign without its best player of last season, Nuri Sahin, who left champions Borussia Dortmund for Spanish giants Real Madrid at the start of the summer. And it has been a summer of change in Germany, albeit mainly managerial. The most significant have seen Jupp Heynckes swap last year’s runners-up Bayer Leverkusen for Bayern Munich, replacing Louis van Gaal at the Allianz Arena, and Robin Dutt come in to take Heynckes place in the Rhineland.

However, there is another change of note, this time in the table itself as for the 2011/12 season Germany now has four Champions League spots after overtaking Italy following Werder Bremen’s victory over Sampdoria in last year’s qualifying round for the tournament. This means for the first time in its history, three teams will qualify automatically from the Bundesliga, with the fourth going into the final round of Champions League qualifying, making the battle in the upper echelons even more intense.

Will Borussia Dortmund retain the title they won so impressively last season? Bayern Munich have strengthened and have not gone more than one season without getting their hands on the Bundesliga trophy since 1996, when the winners were, perhaps tellingly, Dortmund. Inside Futbol preview the 2011/12 Bundesliga campaign:

FC Augsburg

A tough campaign lies ahead for Augsburg given that the teams which just missed relegation last year, the likes of Borussia Monchengladbach, Schalke, Wolfsburg and Werder Bremen, will be considerably stronger this season.

Led by Dutchman Jos Luhukay, Augsburg have lost important players in Kees Kwakman and Ibrahima Traore, but have brought in a number of other performers to fill the gaps created by their departures. Patrick Mayer and Sascha Molders should add a goalscoring threat whilst Edgar Davids’ cousin Lorenzo Davids will marshal the midfield. Avoiding relegation will be a big ask though.

Key arrivals: Sebastian Langkamp (Karlsruhe), Patrick Mayer (Heidenheim), Dominic Peitz (Union Berlin), Lorenzo Davids (NEC), Sascha Molders (FSV Frankfurt), Akaki Gogia (Wolfsburg – loan)
Key departures: Kees Kwakman (Groningen), Ibrahima Traore (Stuttgart), Daniel Framberger (TSV Neusass), Lucas Sinkiewicz (Bochum)
Prediction: 17th

Bayer Leverkusen

The signing of prolific youngster Andre Schurrle from last season’s surprise package Mainz will go some way to offsetting the huge loss of midfield dynamo Arturo Vidal at the BayArena, even though the forward is not a direct replacement for the Chilean.

But it is in defence where Leverkusen needs to improve after conceding twice as many goals last season as champions Dortmund. Their lack of reinforcements in this area, combined with the retirement of Sami Hyypia, means that though the club should challenge for the Champions League, it is hard to see them sustaining a push for the title at the very end.

Key arrivals: Bastian Oczipka (St Pauli), Andre Schurrle (Mainz)
Key departures: Sami Hyypia (retired), Tomas Bobelz (retired), Arturo Vidal (Juventus), Richard Sukuta-Pasu (Kaiserslautern), Constant Djakpa (Eintracht Frankfurt), Bulent Kaplan (Besiktas), Zvonko Pamic (Duisburg – loan), Kevin Kampl (Osnabruck), Domagoj Vida (Dinamo Zagreb)
Prediction: 5th

Bayern Munich

Bayern Munich will be favourites for the title this campaign and are determined to regain the Bundesliga title from Borussia Dortmund. The signing of flying Brazilian full back Rafinha will see Philip Lahm move to the left, solving one of the club’s problem positions, whilst another – goalkeeper – has been remedied by the capture of Manuel Neuer from Schalke. Jerome Boateng has also arrived from Manchester City, strengthening the defence further.

Jupp Heynckes lands for his third spell as manager and should restore some order to the club. With the talents of Franck Ribery and Arjen Robben going forward, no team can match the Bavarians’ attacking talent, but beating Dortmund to the title will take more than craft. Can Heynckes create the team spirit required to lift the Bundesliga?

Key arrivals: David Alaba (Hoffenheim – loan return), Rafinha (Genoa), Takashi Usami (Gamba Osaka – loan), Manuel Neuer (Schalke), Jerome Boateng (Manchester City), Nils Peterson (Energie Cottbus)
Key departures: Hamit Altintop (Real Madrid), Andreas Ottl (Hertha Berlin), Miroslav Klose (Lazio), Mehmet Ekici (Werder Bremen), Thomas Kraft (Hertha Berlin)
Prediction: 2nd

Borussia Dortmund

The loss of Nuri Sahin to Real Madrid will harm Borussia Dortmund’s attempt to retain the title, but the return from injury of Japanese starlet Shinji Kagawa, as well as the precocious talent of Mario Goetze, means that the champions have plenty of creativity going forward still. Robert Lewandowski and Lucas Barrios should ensure that Jurgen Klopp’s men score an abundance of goals next season, but it was not just the Ruhr side’s attacking flair which brought them the title.

Dortmund’s defence was one of the best in Bundesliga history. And with Mats Hummels and Neven Subotic lining up again at the heart of backline in front of Roman Weidenfeller and a number of additions to the defence and midfield, Dortmund will at the least go very close to keeping their crown.

Key arrivals: Julian Koch (Duisburg – loan return), Moritz Leitner (Augsburg – loan return), Ivan Perisic (Club Brugge), Ilkay Gündogan (Nurnberg), Chris Lowe (Chemnitz)
Key departures: Nuri Sahin (Real Madrid), Marcus Feulner (Nurnberg), Dede (released), Tamas Hajnal (Stuttgart)
Prediction: 1st

Borussia Monchengladbach

Monchengladbach finished 16th to face the relegation playoff last season but survived after a dramatic defeat of Bochum. It will be a tough task to stay in the Bundesliga again this campaign however, with a number of players leaving.

Die Fohlen have reinforced with untested players from abroad, such as Japanese starlet Yuki Otsu and Australian Matthew Leckie. Michael Bradley returns from his loan spell at English Premier League outfit Aston Villa and whilst Matthias Zimmermann is promising at the back, Monchengladbach will have to be fight hard if they are to have a chance of staying up.

Key arrivals: Yuki Otsu (Kashiwa Reysol), Michael Bradley (Aston Villa – loan return), Matthew Leckie (Adelaide United), Oscar Wendt (FC Copenhagen), Raul Bobadilla (Aris Salonika – loan return), Matthias Zimmermann, Lukas Rupp (both Karlsruhe)
Key departures: Sebastien Schachten (St Pauli), Jean-Sebastien Jaures (retired), Christian Dorda (Greuther Furth), Jens Wissing (Paderborn), Logan Bailly (Neuchatel Xamax), Karim Matmour (Eintracht Frankfurt), Fabian Backer (Alemannia Aachen)
Prediction: 18th

SC Freiburg

At the Dreisamstadion Marcus Sogg steps up to manage the first team to fill the void created by Robin Dutt’s departure for Bayer Leverkusen. Freiburg will hope this turns out to be a good move as they look to repeat last season’s mid-table finish. Papiss Cisse’s superb goalscoring form last year was key to their ninth place feat, but the side are too reliant on the Senegalese, who scored more than half their Bundesliga goals.

If Garra Dembele can adapt to Germany after scoring 26 goals in 24 games for Bulgarian giants Levski Sofia last season, he could relieve the pressure on Cisse. Elsewhere Beg Ferati will add solidity at the back. Freiburg fans should be able to look forward with optimism, but a European push may just be beyond them.

Key arrivals: Beg Ferati (Basel), Daniel Batz (Nurnberg), Ivica Banovic (Duisburg – loan return), Garra Dembele (Levski Sofia)
Key departures: Simon Pouplin (released), Tommy Bechmann (SonderjyskE), Zvonko Pamic (Bayer Leverkusen – loan return), Nicolas Hofler (Erzgebirge Aue),
Prediction: 11th

Hamburg

Having lost Dutch internationals Joris Mathijsen and Ruud van Nistelrooy to Malaga, Hamburg have been looking to strengthen and have raided Chelsea for a number of players, aided by the club’s new sporting director and former Blues man Frank Arnesen. In come youngsters Jacopo Sala and Gokhan Tore in addition to English defender Michael Mancienne.

With Marcus Berg back from a loan spell at PSV Eindhoven and Jeffrey Bruma also arriving, Hamburg have made some useful additions all over the pitch, though they have also lost some key men. Seeing both Piotr Trochowski and David Rozenhal leave will weaken the northern German giants. Last season Hamburg were comfortable but never threatened the European spots. A similar 2011/12 campaign awaits.

Key arrivals: Jeffrey Bruma (Chelsea – loan), Marcus Berg (PSV Eindhoven – loan return), Jacopo Sala, Gokhan Tore, Michael Mancienne (all Chelsea), Per Ciljan Skjelbred (Rosenborg),
Key departures: David Rozehnal (Lille), Ruud van Nistelrooy, Joris Mathijsen (both Malaga), Piotr Trochowski (Sevilla), Ze Roberto (Al Gharafa), Frank Rost (New York Red Bulls), Eric Choupo-Moting (Mainz), Tunay Torun (Hertha Berlin)
Prediction: 12th

Hannover

Hannover’s remarkable campaign last year almost saw Die Roten beat Bayern Munich to a Champions League spot. Repeating that trick will be an ambitious task for the club, but they have held onto their key players and look set to challenge well in the top half of the table again.

Having achieved a large amount on a small budget, and after spending relatively little again this summer, whether Hannover can repeat last year’s remarkable achievement with a small squad whilst competing in Europe is open to question, but they should at least be in contention for European qualification. The addition of Christian Pander from Schalke threatens to be good business if he can stay fit.

Key arrivals: Artur Sobiech (Polonia Warsaw), Henning Hauger (Stabaek), Samuel Radlinger (SV Ried), Christian Pander (Schalke),
Key departures: Felix Burmeister (Arminia Bielefeld), DaMarcus Beasley (Puebla FC), Constant Djakpa (Bayer Leverkusen – loan return), Florian Fromlowitz (Duisburg)
Prediction: 6th

Hertha Berlin

The club from the capital should have a reasonable chance of staying up after winning the 2. Bundesliga title last season to bounce straight back after relegation in 2009/10. Hertha Berlin have brought in Bayern Munich duo Thomas Kraft and Andreas Ottl and while the pair are not good enough for title challengers, they should be good additions for a team at the other end of the table. Also a boost is the return of Brazilian defender Kaka from Braga after the 30-year-old played a key role in their run to the Europa League final.

In promising forward Tunay Torun and defenders Maik Franz and Peter Niemeyer, Hertha have made intelligent signings and even in an increasingly competitive league should be able to scrape to safety, though it might have to be via the relegation playoff.

Key arrivals: Kaka (Braga – loan return), Andreas Ottl, Thomas Kraft (both Bayern Munich), Tunay Torun (Hamburg), Maik Franz (Eintracht Frankfurt), Peter Niemeyer (Werder Bremen),
Key departures: Lennart Hartmann (Alemannia Aachen), Valeri Domovchiyski (Duisburg), Sascha Bigalke (Unterhaching)
Prediction: 16th

Hoffenheim

Hoffenheim’s remarkable stay in the Bundesliga lasts a fourth season, but may be challenged after the loss of manager Ralf Rangnick last year. In a bid to strengthen the village club have signed a number of players, including Fabian Johnson from Wolfsburg and Stuttgart’s Sven Shipplock.

Last year Hoffenheim finished above the quartet of Wolfsburg, Werder Bremen, Stuttgart and Schalke, all of who will be expected to be competing at the other end of the Bundesliga this season, which means the Rhein-Neckar-Arena outfit could by default find themselves scrapping for their lives at the wrong end of the table.

Key arrivals: Sven Shipplock (Stuttgart), Fabian Johnson (Wolfsburg), Prince Tagoe (Partizan Belgrade – loan return), Jukka Raitala (Paderborn), Franco Zukulini (Racing Club de Avallaneda), Michael Gregoritsch (Kapfenberger)
Key departures: David Alaba (Bayern Munich – loan return), Ramazan Ozcan (Ingolstadt)
Prediction: 15th

Kaiserslautern

Kaiserslautern pulled off a significant coup earlier this summer by beating a whole host of teams in Italy and England to the signing of promising Israeli forward Itay Schechter, also bringing in Hapoel Tel-Aviv team-mate Gil Vermouth at the same time.

Having survived following promotion the year before with a storming finish to the 2010/11 campaign, the 1998 champions have lost prolific forward Srdan Lakic and the creative Jan Moravek, so pressure will be on the Israeli pair to replace the duo’s attacking prowess. Christian Tiffert’s quality in the middle of the pitch will be crucial too if Kaiserslautern are to repeat last season’s performance and stay clear of relegation.

Key arrivals: Gil Vermouth, Itay Schechter (both Hapoel Tel-Aviv), Olcay Sahan (Duisburg), Richard Sukuta Paso (Bayer Leverkusen), Kostas Fortounis (Asteras Tripolis), Dorge Kouemaha (Club Brugge)
Key departures: Srdan Lakic (Wolfsburg), Jan Moravek (Schalke), Adam Hlousek (Slavia Prague), Erwin Hoffer (Napoli)
Prediction: 13th

Koln

After dispatching manager Zvonomir Soldo following a disastrous start to the season, Koln rallied to finish 10th under Frank Schaefer last year. He has now been replaced by Stale Solbakken, the man who led Danish champions FC Copenhagen into the Champions League Round of 16.

With Milivoje Novakovic and Lukas Podolski, Koln have firepower up front, but are perhaps too reliant on the pair. Their summer signings have been right back Sascha Riether and promising forward Odise Roshi. Koln may struggle in an increasingly competitive Bundesliga, but should have enough strength throughout the side not to be caught up in a serious relegation tussle.

Key arrivals: Sascha Riether (Wolfsburg), Odise Roshi (KS Flamurtari Vlore)
Key departures: Fabrice Ehret (Evian)
Prediction: 14th

Mainz

Mainz were the season’s surprise package last year, coming fifth in the Bundesliga and qualifying for the Europa League in the process. It was a remarkable campaign which started in blistering fashion for the team from the Rhineland. But they have lost three of their best players; Lewis Holtby and Christian Fuchs have left for Schalke, whilst Andre Schurrle has moved to Bayer Leverkusen.

Highly rated coach Thomas Tuchel has had a tricky summer trying to improve a decimated squad and many questions will need answering this season. Can Deniz Yilmaz fulfil his potential? Will Zdenek Pospech be able to make the transition from Denmark? Malik Fathi is a good capture from Spartak Moscow, and Eugen Polanski, who was at the club initially on loan, is a fine midfielder. Eric Choupo-Moting was not prolific last year with Nurnberg and only time will tell whether Tuchel has adequately replaced the vast attacking talent he has lost.

Key arrivals: Zdenek Pospech (FC Copenhagen), Deniz Yilmaz (Bayern Munich), Fabian Schonheim (Wehen Wiesbaden), Malik Fathi (Spartak Moscow), Marcel Risse (Bayer Leverkusen), Yunus Malli (Borussia Monchengladbach), Eugen Polanksi (Getafe), Eric Maxim Choupo-Moting (Hamburg), Anthony Ujah (Lillestrom)
Key departures: Martin Pieckenhagen (retired), Lewis Holtby, Christian Fuchs (both Schalke), Miroslav Karhan (Spartak Trnava), Andre Schurrle (Bayer Leverkusen), Jan Simak (Jena)
Prediction: 9th

Nurnberg

Nurnberg had a good 2010/11 Bundesliga, finishing sixth, just outside the European spots. Hopes are high that another good season can be enjoyed by the Franconian side, but the losses of on-loan playmaker Mehmet Ekici and midfielder Ilkay Gundogan will be a blow. Der Club have made some promising signings however.

Timm Klose arrives from Swiss side FC Thun on the back of a superb campaign in the European Under-21 Championship and will add solidity in defence, whilst German Under-21 forward Alexander Eisswein should provide a goalscoring threat up front. If Markus Feulner and Daniel Didavi can replace Ekici’s crucial creativity in the final third, it could be another good campaign for Der Altmeister.

Key arrivals: Markus Feulner (Borussia Dortmund), Tomas Pekhart (Baumit Jablonec), Timm Klose (FC Thun), Daniel Didavi (Stuttgart), Alexander Eisswein (Dynamo Dresden)
Key departures: Andreas Wolf (Werder Bremen), Marek Mintal (Hansa Rostock), Ilkay Gündogan (Borussia Dortmund), Julian Schieber (Stuttgart – loan return), Mehmet Ekici (Bayern Munich – loan return)
Prediction: 10th

Schalke 04

Schalke will be hoping to return to the upper echelons of the Bundesliga after a strange season last time around. Their Champions League run was in direct contrast to astonishingly poor league form that saw relegation flirted with at points, but the Ruhr giants finished the season by winning the German Cup.

A promising start to this campaign has already been made, with Schalke winning the Supercup on penalties against Borussia Dortmund. On the transfer front the Ruhr side have lost Manuel Neuer and a summer of overhaul has also seen veterans Angelos Charisteas and Gerald Asamoah depart. Christian Fuchs and Lewis Holtby, prolific suppliers of goalscoring opportunities at last year’s surprise package Mainz, and Jan Moravek, after a fine season with Kaiserslautern, return.

Ralf Rangnick has had a pre-season with Schalke for the first time after taking over during the last campaign and the club should be able to improve. Ralf Fahrmann has replaced Neuer and was excellent against Dortmund, but goalscoring was Schalke’s problem last year; if Moravek, Fuchs and Holtby, in tandem with Juan Manuel Jurado, can provide the chances for Raul and Klaas-Jan Huntelaar, Schalke should challenge for a European spot.

Key arrivals: Jermaine Jones (Blackburn Rovers – loan return), Jan Moravek (Kaiserslautern – loan return), Christian Fuchs (Mainz), Marco Hoger (Alemannia Aachen), Ralf Fahrmann (Eintracht Frankfurt)
Key departures: Manuel Neuer (Bayern Munich), Nicolas Plestan (released), Hao Junmin (Shandong Luneng Taishan), Ali Karimi (Persepolis), Lukas Schmitz (Werder Bremen), Angelos Charisteas (released), Danilo Avelar (Karpaty Lviv – loan return), Christian Pander (Hannover), Gerald Asamoah (released)
Prediction: 3rd

Stuttgart

Stuttgart was another of Germany’s traditional big names to endure a tough campaign last season. A leaky defence was their undoing throughout the 2010/11 Bundesliga and addressing this problem will be the main focus for coach Bruno Labaddia coming into this term.

Defender Maza arrives from PSV Eindhoven, adding experience to the backline, but full back Philipp Degen has left, as has promising forward Sven Shipplock and midfielder Christian Trasch. With the talent at his disposal though, Labaddia should be able to push on this season after taking over midway through last term. If the former striker can get the best out of Zdravko Kusmanovic in the centre of midfield and shore up the defence, the side’s attacking prowess could see Stuttgart return to the top half of the table.

Key arrivals: William Kvist (FC Copenhagen), Maza (PSV Eindhoven), Ibrahima Traore (Augsburg), Tamas Hajnal (Borussia Dortmund)
Key departures: Sven Schipplock (Hoffenheim), Philipp Degen (Liverpool – loan return), Ciprian Marica (released), Elson (released), Christian Trasch (Wolfsburg)
Prediction: 8th

Werder Bremen

In addition to a number of astute signings, Werder Bremen have Brazilian defender Naldo back from his season-long injury which helped contribute towards a disastrous campaign last time around, also in part prompted by the sale of Mesut Ozil. If Marko Marin can find form and new signing Mehmet Ekici fulfil his potential, Werder may have the creativity that they lacked so often last season. Defensively the club have strengthened too, signing Sokratis Papastathopoulos on loan and bringing in Schalke’s Lukas Schmitz.

Strong challengers the year before last, Werder should be back in the top half of the table this time around. A serious challenge for the Bundesliga crown appears unlikely, but a European spot may not be beyond Thomas Schaaf’s side.

Key arrivals: Markus Rosenberg (Racing Santander – loan return), Lukas Schmitz (Schalke), Mehmet Ekici (Bayern Munich), Sokratis Papastathopoulos (Genoa – loan), Andreas Wolf (Nurnberg), Tom Trybull (Hansa Rostock)
Key departures: Petri Pasanen (Red Bull Salzburg), Daniel Jensen (released), Torsten Frings (Toronto FC), Samuel (Anderlecht), Dominik Schmidt (Eintracht Frankfurt), John Mosquera (Union Berlin), Jurica Vranjes (released)
Prediction: 4th

Wolfsburg

Like Werder, Wolfsburg experienced a nightmare 2010/11 campaign. English coach Steve McClaren failed to get the best out of his team and his successor Felix Magath could only just keep the Wolves in the Bundesliga.

Signing Kaiserslautern’s prolific forward Srdan Lakic should give Wolfsburg more bite in attack, and this is particularly crucial after they struggled up front last year, whilst the experienced Hasan Salihamidzic can only help the team so much. Creative midfielder Diego is still at the Volkswagen Arena, but is likely to go after falling out with Magath. The former Schalke and Bayern Munich boss is renowned for having an excellent first season at the teams he manages before falling off the next time around and Wolfsburg can at least look forward to a more secure campaign, even if they may struggle to hit the heights of two years ago.

Key arrivals: Patrick Ochs, Marco Russ (both Eintracht Frankfurt), Hasan Salihamidzic (Juventus), Srdan Lakic (Kaiserslautern), Christian Träsch (Stuttgart), Mateusz Klich (Cracovia)
Key departures: Cicero (Tombense – loan return), Fabian Johnson (Hoffenheim), Grafite (Al-Ahli Dubai), Sergei Karimov (MSV Duisburg), Karim Ziani (Kayserispor)
Prediction: 7th

Diamanti Joins Bologna

Bologna has won the race to sign sought-after midfielder Alessandro Diamanti.

The 28-year-old, who won his first cap with Italy just last year, has been linked to a number of clubs after Brescia was relegated last term.

Serie A rivals Sampdoria and Fiorentina had both reportedly been keen on the former West Ham United player, but Bologna confirmed his signature this evening.

"Bologna FC 1909 is able to communicate that we have have reached an agreement with Brescia Calcio for the transfer of Alessandro Diamanti on a co-ownership deal," said a statement on the club's official website.

Lokomotiv Moscow Signs Felipe Caicedo

Lokomotiv Moscow has completed signing of Ecuadorian international Felipe Caicedo.

The arrival of the twenty-year old striker is another mark on his well travelled resume, each showing glimpses of his vast talent but through misfortune or simply changing administrations he has been unable to find a home.

Far more than an attack with pace, Felipe Caicedo demonstrates a keen eye for the goal as evidenced in his recent play in the Copa América, highlighted by his two-goal performance against Brazil.

Moving to Swiss Super League powerhouse FC Basel in 2006 as a seventeen year-old he made the move to Manchester City two years later. After shining brightly he lost his starting berth during the clubs spending spree and was later loaned to Lisbon’s Sporting at the start of the 2009 campaign. Unable to make his mark in Lisbon, he was later loaned to La Liga sides Málaga and later Levante, where he restored his confidence and goal scoring abilities.

The addition of Felipe Caicedo does pose an interesting series of personnel questions for the Railwayman who now have a glut of attacking talent with Dmitri Sychev, Victor Obinna, Maicon, Aleksandr Marenich and Baye Djiby Fall.

Hoffenheim Sign Belgian Teen

Hoffenheim have signed Belgium Under 19 goalkeeper Koen Casteels for an undisclosed fee from Belgian club Genk.

The 19-year-old has penned a four-year contract, the Bundesliga outfit announced on their official website on Monday.

"We are pleased that we could secure the services of Koen Casteels, a highly talented young goalkeeper," said general manager Ernst Tanner.

"He is recognized as one of the top talents in Europe."

Hoffenheim on Sunday required extra-time to get past Germania Windeck in the German Cup, with Fabian Johnson and Ryan Babel scoring goals so secure a 3-1 win.

Roma Weigh Up Move For Arsenal Striker Marouane Chamakh

Roma are pondering a move for Arsenal striker Marouane Chamakh.

The Moroccan hitman fell out of favour at the Emirates during the second half of last season and is thought to be available from the Gunners for the right price.

Chamakh attracted attention from Paris Saint-Germain earlier this summer, but rebuffed the approach to fight for his place with Arsenal.

Given the ambition PSG have shown since and the money at their disposal, the 27-year-old’s decision was a clear statement of intent.

This will not deter Roma however, who are on the lookout for a new striker to place before coach Luis Enrique before the start of the 2011/12 Serie A season.

The Giallorossi therefore are monitoring transfers in and out of the Emirates and, should Arsene Wenger land another striker, could launch a move for Chamakh.

Roma, bankrolled by new owner Thomas DiBenedetto, have already been active in the summer market, with the focus very much on youth.

Highly rated Bojan Krkic has arrived from European Champions Barcelona, while promising midfielder Erik Lamela was bought from relegated Argentine giants River Plate.

Chelsea's Yuri Zhirkov Set To Join Anzhi Makhachkala

Chelsea winger Yuri Zhirkov is close to joining Anzhi Makhachkala after struggling to make an impact in his two-year stint at Stamford Bridge.

Lifesports reports the 27-year-old former CSKA Moscow midfielder has agreed contractual terms with Anzhi and will undergo a medical later this week.

Chelsea is likely to receive a €15 million (£13.2m) payment from Anzhi for the transfer.

Anzhi have not spoken about a done deal, but their chief executive German Chistyakov said all would be revealed soon when asked about Zhirkov's possible arrival.

"We do not comment on rumours until the moment of an official announcement," Chistyakov said, as reported by itv.com.

"When something becomes concrete we will certainly share the information."

It is said an unsettled spell in England coupled with a desire for first-team action have influenced the player's choice to move back to Russian football.

Joey Barton Made Available On Free Transfer

Joey Barton has been made available on a free transfer, Newcastle have confirmed on their official website.

Relations between the club and the outspoken midfielder had already been strained following a breakdown of contract talks over the summer, with Barton taking to Twitter to air his frustrations.

The 28-year-old did so again following yesterday's friendly defeat at Leeds, before saying he would make an announcement on his future at 4pm today.

But the club have pre-empted whatever Barton was going to say by announcing he is able to leave the club a year out from the end of his contract.

A brief statement on http://www.nufc.co.uk read: "Newcastle United can today confirm that Joey Barton has been placed on the transfer list.

"The player has been advised that he can leave the club on a free transfer."

Barton made reference to behind-the-scenes unrest on the social networking site yesterday afternoon, following on from full-back Jose Enrique who was recently fined by the club for accusing them of lacking ambition via his own account.

In May, Barton's agent Willie McKay said the player would not be offered a new deal with the club, with Barton later Tweeting that they wanted a "'younger, better, cheaper player".

The Liverpudlian has become a fans' favourite in the north east after initially suffering a troublesome start to his life on Tyneside.

After joining for £5.8million from Manchester City in June 2007 he served a 77-day prison sentence after being found guilty of assault following an incident in Liverpool, while he was also given a suspended four-month sentence for a training ground assault on then City team-mate Ousmane Dabo.

The Dabo incident earned him a six-match ban upon his release from jail, before injury then curtailed his first-team comeback, and his days at the club looked to be numbered as he was sent off in a late-season clash at Liverpool, a game Newcastle lost 3-0 on their way to relegation from the Premier League.

He clashed with manager Alan Shearer in the aftermath and was suspended by the club, but resolved his differences sufficiently enough to remain with them in the Championship under new boss Chris Hughton.

Although injury ruled him out for the middle part of the season he played key roles at the start and end of what was a title-winning campaign.

He went on to become a key figure in the first-team last season, and was understood to be close to extending his stay at St James' Park in January when the bombshell of Andy Carroll's departure for Liverpool dropped.

Talks were put on hold until the end of the season with the player later indicating that he would be happy to stay if captain and friend Kevin Nolan also put pen to paper on a new deal.

But Nolan's exit to West Ham was followed by the news that Barton would be leaving next summer, although recent developments have brought that forward.

Barton's promised tweet arrived 55 minutes later than expected, with him confirming the news and expressing his pride at having worn the club's shirt, while also getting in another dig at the owners.

Chelsea Prepare Shock Move For £15m Rated Liverpool Star

Chelsea is to attempt to sign Alberto Aquilani from Liverpool, with Andre Villas reportedly growing increasingly unsure about spending £40m on Luka Modric.

Quite understandably, Aquilani wants his future resolved on a permanent basis, so whether Liverpool would accept the offer remains unclear.

However, Villas Boas is looking to alter Chelsea’s style of play to a more fluid passing game – rather than the physically dominant, direct attack they currently employ.

Though given little chance to impress on Merseyside, Aquilani has still proven his capability in fitting in with that methodology.

Furthermore, concerns over his fitness would be allayed with either Oriol Romeu, Frank Lampard or Jon Obi Mikel alongside him.

Michael Essien, of course, is out of action until next year with a cruciate knee ligament injury, but Josh McEachran has stepped up to the plate nicely.

Arsenal Eye £26m Double Defender Deal

Arsene Wenger wants to bolster his defence for next season by signing both Phil Jagielka and Emilio Izaguirre, according to sources close to the club.

The Gunners defensive frailties were all too apparent during Saturday's Emirates Cup clash with Boca Juniors, when they squandered a two-goal lead to draw 2-2.

Wenger has come in for criticism from some Arsenal fans in recent years for failing to spend big in the transfer market, but he is now planning to splash the cash on two defenders - Everton's Jagielka and Celtic's Izaguirre.

The Frenchman is aiming to complete a deal for the Toffees centre-back Jagielka, 28, in the coming week.

The England international is viewed as a priority target for the French tactician after an offer of £10m rejected last month.

It is unlikely the Gunners will match Everton's £18m valuation of the England international, but the North London club is hoping a new offer of £15m may be enough to trigger negotiations.

Wenger is also targeting Celtic left-back Izaguirre, 26, to fill the void left by Gael Clichey, who joined rivals Manchester City for £7m.

Celtic boss Neil Lennon has expressed his desire to keep the Honduran at Parkhead, whilst the player's advisor Marco Tulio Suazo has said the player is happy to see out his contract with the SPL side.

But the Hoops could do business at the right price, and are holding out for a fee in the region of £11m for a player that cost just £600,000 deal from Motagua last August.

Chelsea To Launch £30m Cash Plus Player Offer For Modric

Chelsea will look to bring an end their long running pursuit of Tottenham playmaker Luka Modric by offering the North London club £30m and £10m rated England Under 21 international Daniel Sturridge in exchange for the Croatian international.

Modric has stated his desire to move to Stamford Bridge but thus far Tottenham boss Harry Redknapp and Chairman Daniel Levy have stuck to their guns and steadfastly refused to negotiate. However assistant manager Kevin Bond has since stated that “everyone has a price” and Chelsea will hope that this latest offer will be accepted.

Chelsea youngster Daniel Sturridge impressed during a loan spell at Bolton last term, netting eight goals in 12 matches, and the former Man City man may struggle to secure regular first team football under new Blues boss Andre Villas-Boas and may therefore be interested in becoming part of a deal to bring Modric to West London.

Harry Redknapp has been busily looking into improving his attacking options after his quartet of striker, Robbie Keane, Peter Crouch, Roman Pavlyuchenko and Jermain Defore, failed to make an impact in Premier League football last term and the offer of Sturridge into the bargain could help resolve his need to improve his need to add more firepower to his White Hart Lane squad.

Chelsea boss Andre Villas-Boas has earmarked Modric as his number one summer target and owner Roman Abramovich is keen to seal the deal before the season gets under way, hence the club’s willingness to once again up their offer for the former Dynamo Zagreb midfielder.

Similarly if Harry Redknapp is to accept defeat and sell a player who has made it clear he wants to leave, then he will want time to re-invest the cash to help bring in further additions as help Tottenham break back into the top four.

Tottenham have attempted to placate Modric by offering him the captain’s armband in pre-season encounters but it is still abundantly clear that the 25 year old wants to secure a move to Chelsea this summer.