Report: Manchester United, Leicester agree monster Maguire fee - 4 minutes read
Manchester United, Leicester agree monster Maguire fee – ProSoccerTalk
Gareth Bale is not going to play for Real Madrid this season. The jersey he will pull onto his body remains a mystery.
Real manager Zinedine Zidane said that “it’d be better” for the club and player if he was sold tomorrow, claiming it’s nothing personal but that Bale is simply not in his plans.
Bale’s agent Jonathan Barnett poured gasoline on those comments by blasting the French legend as “a disgrace,” saying the player and agent are “working on” an exit.
Obviously it’s far from disgraceful for Zidane to publicly admit that a massive player and personality may no longer fit the bill, and Barnett’s harsh words are more than agent talk: He wants a higher fee than will come from Real saying, “He’s 10000000000% available.”
Barnett does represent Jesse Lingard and Luke Shaw, and there are so many reasons to think the Welshman could move to Manchester United. A return to Spurs is obviously romantic, but the club’s wage structure would be a concern to deeming this a fit.
Bale wasn’t fantastic last season, posting eight goals and three assists in under 1800 La Liga minutes and adding three goals and two assists in under 500 Champions League minutes (In fact, he was the 14th ranked player in UCL advanced stats according to Who Scored).
He is not far removed from monster campaigns with Real, and it’s no surprise that his production would drop off in a world without Cristiano Ronaldo around him (and vice versa, to a lesser degree).
There are a lot of reasons to wonder whether Mauricio Pochettino and Daniel Levy would consider what it takes to bring Bale to town. It would instantly and realistically elevate the discussion about whether Spurs could seriously rival Liverpool and Man City for a Premier League title while adding Champions League mettle as well.
The idea of Bale playing with Harry Kane the way he worked with Ronaldo and Karim Benzema is electric, though the prospective move took a hit by Zidane’s lack of love for Christian Eriksen.
Bayern Munich is another potential avenue for Bale, as is the Chinese Super League.
But we wonder if the 30-year-old would sign up for massive David Beckham wages at Inter Miami with a loan to a Champions League side for a season ahead of the Super Becks’ opening campaign in MLS. What better way to engender some fan interest amongst Floridians and Manchester United fans than a nice loan? We’re sure Zlatan brought some Red Devils’ eyes to LA, for what it’s worth. Spurs would work here, too, as would any side hopeful of expanding their American imprint.
Maybe Bale isn’t ready for that step. He’d surely prefer adding to his four Champions League titles and probably likes the idea of doing some bigger things for Wales, but there’s a lot of dough in America and really it’s not going to cost him his place with the Welsh side (though concerns about competition would be legit).
Source: Nbcsports.com
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Keywords:
Manchester United F.C. • Leicester City F.C. • Gareth Bale • Real Madrid C.F. • Zinedine Zidane • It's Nothing Personal • Jonathan Barnett (sports agent) • Jesse Lingard • Luke Shaw • Wales • Manchester United F.C. • Tottenham Hotspur F.C. • Gareth Bale • 2014–15 Premier League • Assist (football) • La Liga • Hat-trick • Assist (football) • UEFA Champions League • UEFA Champions League • Cristiano Ronaldo • Mauricio Pochettino • Daniel Levy (businessman) • Gareth Bale • Tottenham Hotspur F.C. • Liverpool F.C. • Manchester City F.C. • Premier League • UEFA Champions League • Gareth Bale • Harry Kane • Ronaldo (Brazilian footballer) • Karim Benzema • Christian Eriksen • FC Bayern Munich • Gareth Bale • Chinese Super League • David Beckham • Inter Milan • Miami Heat • Loan (sports) • UEFA Champions League • David Beckham • Major League Soccer • Fan (person) • Manchester United F.C. • OGC Nice • Belgium national football team • For What It's Worth (Buffalo Springfield song) • Tottenham Hotspur F.C. • Gareth Bale • UEFA Champions League • Wales • Wales •
Gareth Bale is not going to play for Real Madrid this season. The jersey he will pull onto his body remains a mystery.
Real manager Zinedine Zidane said that “it’d be better” for the club and player if he was sold tomorrow, claiming it’s nothing personal but that Bale is simply not in his plans.
Bale’s agent Jonathan Barnett poured gasoline on those comments by blasting the French legend as “a disgrace,” saying the player and agent are “working on” an exit.
Obviously it’s far from disgraceful for Zidane to publicly admit that a massive player and personality may no longer fit the bill, and Barnett’s harsh words are more than agent talk: He wants a higher fee than will come from Real saying, “He’s 10000000000% available.”
Barnett does represent Jesse Lingard and Luke Shaw, and there are so many reasons to think the Welshman could move to Manchester United. A return to Spurs is obviously romantic, but the club’s wage structure would be a concern to deeming this a fit.
Bale wasn’t fantastic last season, posting eight goals and three assists in under 1800 La Liga minutes and adding three goals and two assists in under 500 Champions League minutes (In fact, he was the 14th ranked player in UCL advanced stats according to Who Scored).
He is not far removed from monster campaigns with Real, and it’s no surprise that his production would drop off in a world without Cristiano Ronaldo around him (and vice versa, to a lesser degree).
There are a lot of reasons to wonder whether Mauricio Pochettino and Daniel Levy would consider what it takes to bring Bale to town. It would instantly and realistically elevate the discussion about whether Spurs could seriously rival Liverpool and Man City for a Premier League title while adding Champions League mettle as well.
The idea of Bale playing with Harry Kane the way he worked with Ronaldo and Karim Benzema is electric, though the prospective move took a hit by Zidane’s lack of love for Christian Eriksen.
Bayern Munich is another potential avenue for Bale, as is the Chinese Super League.
But we wonder if the 30-year-old would sign up for massive David Beckham wages at Inter Miami with a loan to a Champions League side for a season ahead of the Super Becks’ opening campaign in MLS. What better way to engender some fan interest amongst Floridians and Manchester United fans than a nice loan? We’re sure Zlatan brought some Red Devils’ eyes to LA, for what it’s worth. Spurs would work here, too, as would any side hopeful of expanding their American imprint.
Maybe Bale isn’t ready for that step. He’d surely prefer adding to his four Champions League titles and probably likes the idea of doing some bigger things for Wales, but there’s a lot of dough in America and really it’s not going to cost him his place with the Welsh side (though concerns about competition would be legit).
Source: Nbcsports.com
Powered by NewsAPI.org
Keywords:
Manchester United F.C. • Leicester City F.C. • Gareth Bale • Real Madrid C.F. • Zinedine Zidane • It's Nothing Personal • Jonathan Barnett (sports agent) • Jesse Lingard • Luke Shaw • Wales • Manchester United F.C. • Tottenham Hotspur F.C. • Gareth Bale • 2014–15 Premier League • Assist (football) • La Liga • Hat-trick • Assist (football) • UEFA Champions League • UEFA Champions League • Cristiano Ronaldo • Mauricio Pochettino • Daniel Levy (businessman) • Gareth Bale • Tottenham Hotspur F.C. • Liverpool F.C. • Manchester City F.C. • Premier League • UEFA Champions League • Gareth Bale • Harry Kane • Ronaldo (Brazilian footballer) • Karim Benzema • Christian Eriksen • FC Bayern Munich • Gareth Bale • Chinese Super League • David Beckham • Inter Milan • Miami Heat • Loan (sports) • UEFA Champions League • David Beckham • Major League Soccer • Fan (person) • Manchester United F.C. • OGC Nice • Belgium national football team • For What It's Worth (Buffalo Springfield song) • Tottenham Hotspur F.C. • Gareth Bale • UEFA Champions League • Wales • Wales •