by lakes10 » Mon Jul 04, 2005 10:17 am
ok how about this paper then
The Times
Gerrard fuming towards exit
By Oliver Kay
Liverpool are playing with fire if they are attempting to prove the captain is bigger than the club
THE LEAVING OF LIVERPOOL, IT SEEMS, is becoming a bitter reality for Steven Gerrard. Barely five weeks after leading his team to glory in the European Cup final, the inspirational hero of Istanbul has angrily broken off contract negotiations with his hometown club, who now face the prospect of selling their crown jewel to the highest bidder, most probably Real Madrid or Chelsea.
At the club’s Melwood training ground on Saturday afternoon, Gerrard informed Rafael Benítez, the manager, that he has “had enough” of their casual approach to contract negotiations, telling the Spaniard that he had been ready to sign a new deal since the final on May 25 and that, in the absence of an offer, he has concluded that there is a hidden agenda to force him out of Anfield.
It is an astonishing twist in a saga that had appeared to be heading for a happy ending after Gerrard, having prevaricated about his future for so long, sat alongside Benítez in the glorious aftermath of victory over AC Milan in Istanbul and asked “How could I leave after a night like this?” But, he has grown so frustrated at the silence from the club over his contract negotiations that he informed Benítez that all talks were off and, according to a close friend, “he won’t change his mind now”.
Gerrard’s present contract, worth £80,000 a week including bonuses and signing-on fees, runs until June 2007, but, after the events of the past 48 hours, the relationship with the club seems damaged beyond repair. The greater issue for the club surrounds the 25-year-old’s market value, which will plummet from £30 million to nothing over the final two years of his contract. Nowhere in the Premiership has the impact of the Bosman ruling been more harshly felt than at Anfield, where unhappy memories linger from the departures of Steve McManaman and Michael Owen — for no fee and for a cut-price £8 million — both, coincidentally, to Real.
Having made two informal inquiries about Gerrard to Benítez last month, Real will require little encouragement to make their move. They signed a similar type of player, Pablo García, from Osasuna last week, but even in the past few days, the Spanish club have been briefing their favoured media outlets that Gerrard is their choice to become the next galáctico and, more dubiously, that he has already told Benítez of his desire to move to Madrid.
Gerrard has never had any great desire to play abroad. At his most restless last season, he imagined Chelsea, rather than Real, to be his most likely destination. Sources close to the player indicate that he “wouldn’t be against” moving to Spain, but his preference has always been to stay in England, which is all the encouragement that José Mourinho, the Chelsea manager, will need in his pursuit of a player who famously rejected his advances a year ago.
Rick Parry, the Liverpool chief executive, said in February that Gerrard “is above money — it doesn’t matter if it’s £30 million, £40 million or £50 million, we won’t accept offers” — but something in the club’s stance has changed. Gerrard’s advisers, SFX, have been aghast at the lack of urgency the club have shown. His agent, Struan Marshall, was on honeymoon at the start of June but, after weeks of chasing, a meeting was finally arranged for last Wednesday and the Gerrard camp were dismayed that no offer was forthcoming.
Sources at Anfield responded last night by asking why they should be rushed into offering a new contract for a player whose present deal has two years to run. Certainly Gerrard’s hastiness is hard to reconcile with the patience he demanded of Benítez and supporters throughout last season by questioning his long-term future, but, if this is an attempt by Liverpool to remind their captain that no player is bigger than the club, it is one that could backfire horribly unless the Spaniard can put the likely £30 million proceeds to spectacular effect.
There has been a growing suspicion in recent weeks — not least at SFX — that Benítez, lacking the financial resources to buy Dirk Kuyt from Feyenoord, may prefer to raise funds by selling Gerrard, whom, in any case, he has always seemed to regard as an inferior player to the imperious Xabi Alonso. A £30 million fee would enable him to sign Kuyt, a top-class central defender and, ideally, a replacement for Gerrard — perhaps Ruben Barája, who served him so well at Valencia — but at what cost to the club’s traditions, with native Scouse accents already being drowned out by Hispanic voices in the corridors of Anfield?
