Manchester United ended the transfer window
in farce and disappointment with the deal to sign Ander Herrera having
failed after the club refused to pay his €36m buyout clause, while
claiming that imposters in Spain attempted to muscle in on the deal.
This meant that David Moyes
signed only Marouane Fellaini for £27.5m, £4m more than his expired
buyout clause, despite a summer that began with the pursuit of
Barcelona's Cesc Fábregas and Thiago Alcântara.
As the £23.5m clause for Everton's
Fellaini ended on 31 July, United faced the ignominy of having to pay
more than this after Moyes and Ed Woodward, the executive vice-chairman,
decided to allow it to expire in the hope the midfielder could be
bought for less.
With Fellaini handing in an official transfer
request at Everton's training ground early on Monday eveningthree hours
before the window closed and United deciding to haggle over Herrera's
€36m release clause despite the Spanish club making it clear they would
not sell for less, the strategy adopted by Moyes and Woodward came down
to a frantic effort to strengthen in the closing hours of the window.
After
United officials were reported as having gone to the offices of the
Spanish Football Association to pay Herrera's clause, the club later
said these were actually imposters. Yet this caused bemusement in Spain
as the three men pictured going in were known Spanish sports lawyers who
have been involved in previous buyouts and were understood there to
have been acting on Herrera's behalf.
United's late acquisition of
Fellaini came only after Woodward decided he should finally discard the
joint-bid approach for the midfielder and his club team-mate, Leighton
Baines. This occurred after a last offer of £40m was turned down by
Everton for the pair during the weekend.
When a £15m bid from
United on Monday for Baines was rejected – the fee was the same as in
the joint price – Fellaini then appeared the more likely to arrive. Yet,
with Bill Kenwright, the Everton chairman, valuing the midfielder at
£27.5m, United's resolve to sign Fellaini was severely tested as the fee
was £4m more than the player's buyout clause..
Regarding Herrera,
United had decided initially to offer €30m despite knowing that, as
Athletic field only Basque players, they would not be minded to sell
unless forced to do so by the full €36m being bid to trigger the
player's release clause.
In last summer's prospective moves of
Javi Martínez to Bayern Munich and Fernando Llorente to Juventus,
Athletic had shown how determined they could be to retain players. In
Martínez's case the €40m buyout clause had to be paid by the German
club. For Juventus, who were not minded to pay Llorente's €35m clause,
they had to wait until his contract expired to bring the player to the
club.
While a last-minute loan deal to bring in Real Madrid's
Fábio Coentrão to Old Trafford, after the prospective transfer of Baines
failed, also did not occur, Woodward in particular will face serious
questions about a summer transfer policy that has left United looking
off the pace and which cannot have enhanced their standing as a global
brand.While Arsene Wenger bought Real's Mesut Ozil for a £42.5m Woodward
– and Moyes – were left with their hopes of making a marquee, signature
signing, in the shape of Fabregas, to begin the Scot's tenure in
bullish fashion, having failed.
Tweet Follow @punshcomempower
50% off Hosting for your Website at GoDaddy.com!
It's a BIG Deal! $5.99* .COM from GoDaddy.com!
It's a BIG Deal! $5.99* .COM from GoDaddy.com!
Host a site without stress on namecheap eApps|YOUR APP HOSTING PROVIDER
Submit your Website
Free webmaster resources including SEO Tools, Computer Glossary, Templates Sign up to BIGTIMEBUX today!

0 comments:
Post a Comment