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December 22, 2009

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Barca rules out bid for City's Robinho

BARCELONA president Joan Laporta has ruled out any move for Manchester City striker Robinho during the January transfer window.

Laporta said that the Premier League club rejected the European champion's offer for the Brazil international when representatives of the two sides met in Abu Dhabi.

He added that Barcelona is "very satisfied" with the team it has and that unless a last-minute move is necessary, it will not sign any players during the winter break.

While Robinho started owner Sheikh Mansour's spending spree at City - beating Chelsea to his signature as clear a statement of intent - the Brazil forward has failed to live-up to his price tag. He was signed from Madrid last year for a British record transfer fee of 32.5 million pounds (then $51 million).

After spending most of this season out injured, he has made little impact on his return.

Italian Roberto Mancini was yesterday set to take over from Mark Hughes, who was fired on Saturday despite City being sixth in the Premier League standings - the target set before the season.

Eighteen months earlier, Sven-Goran Eriksson was dumped by then owner Thaksin Shinawatra despite delivering the top-10 finish that had been requested of him.

Patience has long been in short supply at the underachieving club which lives in the shadow of powerful neighbor Manchester United.

While Alex Ferguson has lifted 25 major trophies in 23 years at United, City has had 14 different permanent managers - including Mancini - without winning anything in the same period.

"Comedy has always been at the heart of what this club is all about," Manchester City chief executive Garry Cook said last month. The former Nike executive was referring to a billboard poster taunting United about Carlos Tevez's summer defection, but it could apply to City's decision-making in recent years.

Hughes has given Mancini an immediate route to glory by setting up a League Cup semifinal clash with United in January. But that competition, which delivered City's last major title in 1976, is low on the priority list.

When Mancini is formally unveiled at City's stadium, Cook is likely to be pressed on whether Champions League qualification - by finishing in the top four - is now Sheikh Mansour's primary target for this season as a return for his massive investment.

Former Chelsea boss Jose Mourinho warned Mancini that the Premier League is very different from Serie A.

"It will be a great and special experience for him to test himself in a very different reality to Italian football," said Inter Milan coach Mourinho, who won two league titles with Chelsea.

"The Premier League is completely different to what he has known so far. Mancini is a good coach and has an owner who spends a lot of money."

Since buying City in September 2008, its Abu Dhabi owner has splurged more than US$330 million on talent.

As Mancini presided over training in the Manchester snow yesterday, he will have been figuring out which areas of the squad need strengthening in the January transfer window.

Cash shouldn't be a problem. Finding the players might be for the Italian manager.

Mancini will have to quickly reunite a group of players hastily assembled by Hughes and stunned by his departure. His experience at Inter Milan will certainly help.

Mancini's English is limited, and he will be assisted at the club by Brian Kidd, the former City and United player who served under Hughes in a technical development role.


 

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