Friday, March 27, 2015

Manchester United news and transfers: Cristiano Ronaldo to be offered £14m-a-year for return?

Ronaldo mega money put aside.

Manchester United will offer Cristiano Ronaldo £14million a year in order to return to Old Trafford, according to the Daily Express.
It is also believed that Real Madrid would be offered £80million for the Portuguese man's services.
Ronaldo, 30, is in the middle of a torrid run of form for Los Blancos, as his future remains up in the air - with Manchester City also interested.
But the recent slump is not going to put off United, according to reports, as they are prepared to break the bank to bring in their man this coming summer.

Sunday, March 1, 2015

Real Madrid 1-1 Villarreal: Cristiano Ronaldo scores from the spot but Carlo Ancelotti's side fail to hold on as Gerard Moreno levels

Cristiano Ronaldo celebrates with Gareth Bale and Karim Benzema after putting Real Madrid 1-0 up from the penalty spot

Cristiano Ronaldo scored his 30th league goal of the season but couldn’t prevent Real Madrid dropping two points in a 1-1 draw with Villarreal.
He is now only one goal from his tally for last season with 12 games left and has become the first striker to score 30 goals a season for the fifth consecutive campaign in one of Europe’s top leagues but he left the pitch annoyed at Real’s failure to pull away from Barcelona at the top of La Liga. 
They are now just two points clear of their rivals with a trip to the Camp Nou later this month still to come. 

Friday, February 27, 2015

Cristiano Ronaldo, Gareth Bale set to return for Real Madrid vs. Villarreal


Ronaldo and Bale have scored 39 league goals between them so far this season.
Real Madrid stars Cristiano Ronaldo and Gareth Bale have both returned to full training and are expected to be fit to face Villarreal on Sunday in La Liga.
Ronaldo and Bale, and centre-back Raphael Varane, have all sat out sessions for various precautionary reasons as Madrid enjoyed a rare midweek without any competitive games, but all three are likely to named by coach Carlo Ancelotti for the game against sixth-placed Villarreal.
Luka Modric, who is back training with this teammates after over four months out with a serious hamstring tear, could make his return in the fixture at the Estadio Santiago Bernabeu.
On Thursday neither Bale nor Ronaldo played a full part in the daily session, with the Wales international working alone and the Portugal captain inside in the gym. However Friday's post-training statementhad happier news for Blancos fans.
"Gareth Bale took his place with the group and completed with the others a training session which was again based around working with the ball," the statement reads. "The only absences from the session were Sergio Ramos, Sami Khedira and James Rodriguez, who continue with their recovery processes."

Thursday, February 26, 2015

Lionel Messi and Cristiano Ronaldo: A comparison of their penalty records



When Lionel Messi stepped up to take a 94th minute penalty at the Etihad Stadium on Tuesday night, he not only had a fantastic opportunity to put the tie even further beyond doubt than it already looked, but also to draw level at the top of this season’s Champions League top scorers chart and thereby extend his lead ahead of perennial adversary Cristiano Ronaldo both this season and in the all-time standings.
And yet, the best player of his generation contrived to pass up this chance, allowing Joe Hart to make a fairly comfortable save before inexplicably missing a gaping open goal with a routine header from just a few yards.
The margins between Messi and Ronaldo are so fine in their quest to be the world’s number one footballer that every goal matters, and Messi’s misses will only have fuelled the naysayers who insist he has fallen behind Ronaldo.
This particular one may not prove costly over the course of this two-legged tie, but the Real Madrid winger could certainly overtake Messi in the individual stakes before the season’s end. Incredibly, the duo have won the Champions League top scorer award in each of the last seven seasons; Messi currently leads Ronaldo in this regard by four awards to three. Ronaldo will be keen to level things up this year.

Saturday, February 21, 2015

Report: Louis van Gaal 'rejected' the chance to sign Cristiano Ronaldo after being offered him by agent Jorge Mendes

The Ballon d'Or winner Spanish journalist Alfredo Duro claimed on football TV show El Chiringuito that Ronaldo's representative Jorge Mendes met with United's chief scout Martin Ferguson in January.

Manchester United manager Louis van Gaal reportedly turned down the opportunity to sign Real Madrid star Cristiano Ronaldo after being offered him by the player's agent.
The Ballon d'Or winner Spanish journalist Alfredo Duro claimed on football TV show El Chiringuito that Ronaldo's representative Jorge Mendes met with United's chief scout Martin Ferguson in January.
Ferguson, brother of former Red Devils' manager Sir Alex, reportedly relayed the offer to Van Gaal who is said to have rejected the chance to sign the Portugal ace.
Passionate supporters' group United Reel showed how much they want their former prodigy to return to Old Trafford when they flew a banner over Villarreal's E Madrigal stadium wich read, "COME HOME RONALDO - UNITED REEL."
Ronaldo, who has a £1billion release clause in his contract, left the Premier League for Madrid in 2009 but has consistently been linked with a move back ever since.

Friday, February 20, 2015

Ancelotti: "Cristiano is back"

The boss was pleased following Los Blancos' clean win.
Amid some loud whispers of crisis lately from the fans and media, Carlo was content with what he saw from his guys today.
[I'm] happy as it's never easy. After what's happened in La Liga we needed to play a game like this with good attitude and good play.
On the flow of the game:
Not a very high intensity game as Schalke sat back. After first goal we had good control, and were able to take our opportunity. We started well, with a good game plan, trying to utilise the wings because Marcelo and Caravajal provided us with more space.
On Pepe's return to the starting lineup and what he means to the team.
Pepe is a player with lots of experience, character and an ability to control the back line. His presence in today's match against Schalke 04 was hugely important.
Cristiano Ronaldo has hit a slump in his season and it was pretty apparent but Ancelotti didn't seem to have any issues with the way he rebounded today.
Cristiano played well, he scored and gave an assist. He is back.
On Marcelo's vital screamer late in the game which likely will end up as the key goal which will allow Real Madrid to progress to the next round:
It is not usual to see him shoot with right foot. That was a surprise.
Marcelo also chimed in with his thoughts.
In the Champions League, anything can happen. We have humility and we still have to work to make it through this round. We fought hard tonight and Schalke are a great team. The two goal cushion is a great advantage but nothing is sealed yet.
And his reasoning for his fun goal celebration:
I dedicate it to my niece, I wanted to celebrate it with the mister, with the staff, with Karim Benzema, with Keylor Navas, with everyone, because we are a family and we are proving it.

Source: www.managingmadrid.com

Reasons why Real Madrid should play it safe with their injured players




ings always appear worse when everything is going against you and the same can be said for injuries.  Despite winning at the weekend against Deportivo and the Champions League result in Germany against Schalke 04, the papers are still talking about the defeat to Atletico.  Ancelotti himself was beginning to show his annoyance with this through certain comments made before the Schalke game, insisting that Madrid have now turned a corner.  Much is still being made of the defeat to Atletico and associated events thereafter; but it seems that on the injury front at least, the outlook is all doom and gloom.  If you believe the press, Madrid's injury problems are going to lose them the League never mind the European challenge.
Sure Madrid have some injury problems; every club does.  Two hamstring injuries, a calf strain, a broken metatarsal and a long-term thigh muscle tear to name but a few.  None of these had any realistic chance of healing in time for the Schalke game although we had all hoped that Luka Modric would have met his target as indicated and been available for the first leg in Germany.  So on the night, Madrid travelled to Gelsenkirchen minus Sergio RamosSami Khedira, Fabio Coentrao, and James Rodriguez in addition to the Croatian international.  The game in Germany provided a good indication of how the current Madrid squad will fare without such regulars on the field.
All football clubs have periods where key personnel are unavailable through injury; and as we have said before, this is just part and parcel of the game.  The drama is neither increased nor decreased according to who the next opponents are, and neither is the recovery time influenced by the impending opposition either.  Rushing players back for ‘a big game' has been proved over and over again to be a false economy and often results in what would have been a straight-forward three or four weeks injury turning into a seven or eight-week injury instead.  If players are rushed back because of who the next opponents are and the injury recurs, then the clock is immediately reset to allow for an even longer period than originally envisaged.  As for the ‘big game' theory, all games involvingReal Madrid are big games.
With the two hamstring injuries, it is the very nature of these that gives reasonable cause for concern.  Sergio Ramos wasted no time whatsoever in coming off the pitch immediately after his injury was sustained.  That alone was an indicator that this wasn't going to be a 10-day injury and he didn't come off just as a ‘precaution'.  Hamstring muscle injuries are known for their slow healing properties, and although it could be argued that all muscles will heal at the same rate, the hamstrings functionally are designed to allow changes in pace and to increase or decrease speed; an essential attribute for a footballer to have.  With a mild hamstring injury normal jogging is usually possible, but any attempts to change speed or progress that jog into a half or even a three-quarter pace will be met with pain and stiffness which will eventually lead to protective muscle spasm at best or a recurrence of the original injury at worst.
Current evidence states that the single most identifiable risk factor for repeated or recurrent injury is having sustained an injury previously, and therefore rehabilitation planning needs to allow for this in the delivery of post-injury programmes and return to play fitness testing. I know I've mentioned this point before, but based on the currently available literature, this appears particularly true concerning soft-tissue injuries to the hamstring group.  Available evidence indicates that during running, the hamstring group is biomechanically most susceptible to injury in the deceleration stage and in the early push-off phase before the active leg actually leaves the ground. In other words, a right hamstring muscle will be at it's most susceptible at the moment your body weight rolls forward onto the ball of the foot before pushing off, and then when the leg is controlling the heel back to the ground as you slow down from a sprint.  Additionally, the sharp sudden reactionary movements which footballers are required to perform without having time to prepare for these all add up to an increased injury risk if proper muscle healing hasn't taken place.

Source : www.managingmadrid.com