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Forgetful Ferguson?

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Fraser

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Sir Alex Ferguson has revealed Manchester United have hit a brick wall in their attempts to sign Robin van Persie from Arsenal.
Ferguson revealed on United's recent tour of South Africa United had made a bid for last season's Premier League Golden Boot winner.
The Red Devils interest seems to have fended off competition from Manchester City and Juventus.
However, Arsene Wenger has never sold a player to United.
And, from Ferguson's comments to reporters following Wednesday night's penalty shoot-out defeat to Barcelona in Gothenburg, it doesn't appear he wants to start now.
"We have made a bid and they've been trying to negotiate with other clubs," said Ferguson.
"I don't have a gut feeling on it at the moment, I must admit.
"We're not getting any breakthrough with Arsenal.
"It's difficult to say why they're operating this way.
"I don't know what their thoughts are because they're not giving anything away."
There had been rumours circulating prior to Wednesday night's game that Van Persie was heading to Manchester for a medical.
It seems they were wide of the mark.
"I can't give you any more information," said Ferguson.
"We just have to persevere.
"We are trying our best and hopefully it will come our way but there's no progress at this moment in time."
It was the second transfer blow of the day for United, who discovered prior to kick-off that Brazilian midfielder Lucas Moura had joined cash-rich Paris St-Germain.
Ferguson was keen to sign the teenage midfielder from Sao Paulo and remained in Manchester at the weekend when his team headed to Norway "to do some business".
The clearest indication Moura was looking elsewhere was that Ferguson jetted out of Manchester prior to Brazil's Olympic semi-final win over South Korea on Tuesday night, when the midfielder was an unused substitute.
It seems United simply could not compete with PSG's Qatari-backed spending power.
Following the huge purchases of Zlatan Ibrahimovic and Thiago Silva, Ferguson stated the world had 'gone mad'.
"I find it quite amazing that a club can pay 45million euros for a 19-year-old boy," said the Scot.
"To tell everyone that PSG are here they've signed Thiago Silva and Zlatan Ibrahimovic. They must have spent about £150m in the last month.
"The only deterrent to that is UEFA.
"In the conditions of European football, you don't qualify for Europe by winning the league or coming second - you only get in by invitation.
"That's where, hopefully, UEFA can have some power.
"When somebody's paying £45m for a 19-year-old boy you have to say the game's gone mad."


45 million Euros is about £35 million pounds

Has he drunk so much that he forgets spending £26M in 2004 for Rooney who was alos 19? I know it is £10M difference but allowing for inflation over the last 8 years its surely a similar amount of money, either Fergusons is starting to realise that the scum no longer have the draw they used to or he is really pissed that they can't match other teams for money anymore after years of throwing cash around - either way I like it!
 
He's just moaning because it's other teams that are doing it. If it was Utd refusing to sell a player to a certain club (off the top of my head I know that they refused to sell Paul McGrath to Liverpool - Ferguson himself admitted this) and spending bucket loads on a teenager, Rooney just like you mentioned, then it would be perfectly fine.
 
He's just moaning because it's other teams that are doing it. If it was Utd refusing to sell a player to a certain club (off the top of my head I know that they refused to sell Paul McGrath to Liverpool - Ferguson himself admitted this) and spending bucket loads on a teenager, Rooney just like you mentioned, then it would be perfectly fine.

Also with Heinze they refused to sell.
 
I am really glad that they didn't get Lucas though - i think he would have been a cracking player for them as it pains me to say but they do seem to have a knack of making good young players better.

Anyhow - this has cheered me up no end this morning!
 
Thanks LTW but I have been here a while - I just don't post very often, I had a previous account but it was lost when the site had to be restored

Time to start posting more! The site hasn't been the same without your input tbh ...
 
Yeah - I was going to enquire about getting my old account back but it didn't seem worth it for the number of times I post
 
In addition to his other unattractive character traits Ferguson is also an industrial-strength hypocrite. If anything I'm more sickened by the fact that the media simply give him a platform for it and never, ever take him to task.
 
I'd love to post more but being busy at work coupled with the internet police kind of restricts me - I'll try my best though!
 
Only Man Utd has the right to spend big on their target, others are to keep out he says.

edit: oh, only MU is the only team allowed not to sell their players to other PL teams.
 
Personally I think utd have fuck all to spend. All this talk of Modric, Moura, RVP is just to appease their fans.

RVP having just one season left on his contract, they feel they might get him at a knockdown price.

And yes. Ferguson = greatest hypocrite in the history of football
 
In addition to his other unattractive character traits Ferguson is also an industrial-strength hypocrite. If anything I'm more sickened by the fact that the media simply give him a platform for it and never, ever take him to task.

That last bit is the most annoying part, few do, I wish Brian Reade would lay into him more often, he's the perfect fit.
 
After he was outbid for Lucas on Wednesday, Manchester United manager Alex Ferguson criticised the spending spree, telling his team's website "when somebody's paying 45 million euros ($56 million) for a 19-year-old boy, you have to say the game's gone mad."

Not so, Mourinho maintained.

"You pay 40 million (euros) to a club, that club is going to spend this 40 million buying two or three players from smaller clubs. The smaller clubs get the money, so somebody has to make the circles go around," he said. "UEFA is working on what they call the financial fair play, which will be good for a club like Real Madrid because Real Madrid is economically very powerful but doesn't depend on money not produced by the club. The club by itself produces that money, so Real Madrid will be in a much better position when the financial fair play comes."

UEFA, European football's governing body, is phasing in rules that require teams not to spend more than they earn.

Mourinho appeared to criticise Malaga, who qualified for the Champions League playoffs with a fourth-place finish but now are selling off players such as Santi Cazorla as members of the team complain they haven't been paid.

"When you buy and you owe, for me that's the problem — when you go to big projects and you sign some big players and after that you don't pay to the players, you don't pay to the clubs," he said
 
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