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Manchester United want €58 million for Alejandro Garnacho

Manchester United want €58 million for Alejandro Garnacho

The 42a day ago
MANCHESTER UNITED want £50 million (€58 million) for Chelsea target Alejandro Garnacho, the PA news agency understands.
The 21-year-old's future has appeared to be away from Old Trafford since the winger, like his brother Roberto, on Instagram, expressed frustration at starting May's Europa League final loss to Tottenham on the bench.
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United boss Ruben Amorim reportedly told Garnacho in the days after the defeat in Bilbao that he would be allowed to leave, and the Argentina international has spent pre-season training away from the first team.
Chelsea were linked with a move in January and are thought to have been in dialogue this summer, with the Red Devils understood to be seeking a £50m fee for the academy graduate.
Garnacho was omitted from United's pre-season tour to the United States, where head coach Amorim said last week: 'You can see he's a really talented boy.
'Sometimes things don't work out. You cannot explain specifically what it is, but it's clear that Garnacho wants a different thing with a different leadership. I can understand that. It's not a problem.
'Sometimes (as a player) you adapt to one guy, you have the connection. Other times, you want a new challenge.'
Garnacho joined from Atletico Madrid in 2020 and starred in United's 2022 FA Youth Cup win, before scoring in the FA Cup final victory against Manchester City two years later. He has scored 26 goals in 144 first-team appearances.
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Joey O'Brien hails clinical Rijeka but rues missed chances as Shelbourne exit Europa League
Joey O'Brien hails clinical Rijeka but rues missed chances as Shelbourne exit Europa League

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time3 hours ago

  • RTÉ News​

Joey O'Brien hails clinical Rijeka but rues missed chances as Shelbourne exit Europa League

Rijeka scoring quality goals and Shelbourne not making of the most chances that did come their way was how Joey O'Brien summed up his side's exit from the Europa League. On what was a raucous occasion at Tolka Park, the hosts, leading 2-1 from first leg, were eventually outdone late on as Ante Orec's goal on 90 minutes made it 3-1 for the visitors on the night and with it a passage through to the play-off round. For Shels, the play-off in the Conference League awaits against either Linfield, where they would renew acquaintances after meeting earlier in the Champions League, or Vikingur, with the Faroe Islanders 2-1 to the good ahead their second leg on Thursday evening. Despite trailing from the first leg, Rijeka were boosted by the return of their skilful No 10 Toni Fruk and so with it the expectancy that the tie was far from over. Fruk's brilliant strike gave the Croatian champions the lead on the night and an equally sublime finish from doubled their lead. Mipo Odubeko drew Shels level from the spot but Orec's turn and shot in the hosts' box settled things. Speaking to RTÉ Sport's Tony O'Donoghue, the Shels boss felt his troops managed the first half well and were powerless to prevent that moment of magic from Fruk. "We knew we were going to give up possession, they have some top, top players but I thought after the first 15 to 20 minutes we were fine," were O'Brien's early thoughts on the game. "We restricted them to pot shots from far out and then there was a moment of magic from a very good player. That put us on the back foot but as I said to the boys it's about managing halves of football and sometimes you get that. It's about getting to half-time and we got to half-time 1-0 down." "We then tweaked it and I thought in the second half we were good," he added. "I thought we were the better side. They scored from another moment of magic and then Mipo gets us back into it from the penalty. And then small margins; we had a chance to get a goal (from a Milan Mbeng header) at the back stick. Then they went up the other end, got a bit of luck and got the goal. It's a hard on to take but it is what it is." "You can't do anything about those goals, they were quality. A goal from 35 or 40 yards, you would probably tell a player at any level to shoot. To be fair to our lads they stuck at it, got the penalty. I don't think we went gung-ho for it after that It was a hopeful ball into the box [for the winning goal] that bounced up and it was a nice finish. They got that little bit of luck to get that winner." O'Brien's overall assessment by and large reflected what happened over the course of 90-plus minutes, in that he praised the extra bit of quality from the visitors, while rueing some of the chances his side spurned when in on goal. "People did not see how a good a team Rijeka were. The player that came back in from suspension - Fruk and with Petrovic returning - they are quality players. We had a great atmosphere here and fans wanted us to tear after them but at this level, up against players who can pass it about, as soon as you give them space they will make you pay. That was never going to be the gameplan. "As I said in the first-half we knew they were going to start strong and have a lot of possession but apart from a moment of magic for the first goal we restricted them to pot shots. "We had a threat early on, Ali (Coote) had a chance. It is what it is, maybe he could have gone down, but it was a chance. We had chances throughout the game; Mipo had a chance, Kerr (McInroy) had a chance. We didn't take them and they took theirs." And now it's back to Windsor Park on Thursday to assess the likely opposition in the upcoming play-off. "I will definitely go to Windsor, that's part of the game, you have to do your homework, so I'll have a look," O'Brien outlined. "It's a huge opportunity. The lads are hurting in the dressing room but you have to turn that hurt into going after what we want and that is the group stages."

Absorbing drama as Rijeka score 90th-minute winner to dump Shelbourne out of Europa League
Absorbing drama as Rijeka score 90th-minute winner to dump Shelbourne out of Europa League

The 42

time4 hours ago

  • The 42

Absorbing drama as Rijeka score 90th-minute winner to dump Shelbourne out of Europa League

Europa League third qualifying round, second leg Shelbourne 1 Rijeka 3 Rijeka win 4-3- on aggregate FIRST CAME THE thuds, then came the silence. And in a flurry of dizzying, headache-inducing drama during the final 10 minutes there was the kind of noise that Tolka Park has not witnessed for years, but Shelbourne were ultimately left with a cruel heartache from an absorbing defeat. Their European dream has not been broken by this Rijeka loss as they now have one last shot at a Uefa Conference League play-off against either Linfield or Vikingur. But when Mipo Odubeko stood up and saw his 86th minute penalty squirm under the body of Niko Jankovic it looked like this tie was heading for 30 minutes of extra-time. Instead, a final twist – quite literally – saw the man who conceded the spot kick, Ante Orec, wriggle free in the box and turn to deliver a 90th-minute reverse shot that ensured a 3-1 win on the night sent them through. There had been lengthy VAR drama after the full back pulled back substitute John Martin in the box and it took the guts of four minutes for referee Marian Barbu to consult with his officials before checking the screen. Rijeka showed their nerve to get over that bitter disappointment and the sight of their head coach, Radomir Dalvoic, ignoring the customary post-match handshake with Joey O'Brien and instead sprinting onto the pitch, hopping like a desperate, giddy bunny rabbit into the grateful embrace of his players showed just how this final few moments shredded the nerves. All of this at a point when it looked like Tolka Park had been stunned into a stupor by two moments of lethal Rijeka class from a pair of long-range goals from Toni Fruk and Tiago Dantas either side of half time. Fruk was the one to produce the moment of first-half class on 33 minutes that left Tolka Park stunned. Advertisement His opportunistic snap shot volley inside the D at the edge of the box was clinical and classy. Striker Ante Matej Juric laid the ball out to Tiago Dantas and his tee up for Fruk was half a yard above the ground. In an instant he had a decision to make. Take a touch and get closed down or rely on his technical gifts to come up with something wonderful. He opted for the latter, and delivered. He was on the right side of the D and connected with such sweet conviction that Wessel Speel's dive to his right side was forlorn. No sooner and that sound of the connection reverberated around Drumcondra than the ball hit. All was quiet then. The Rijek bench celebrated wildly with some coming on the pitch but with their away supporters banned from travelling for poor behaviour the most piercing sound was of silence. Until that point, Shels might have been relatively happy with how they were keeping the Croatian champions at arm's length. There was one fine diving block from Paddy Barrett when Juric controlled a clipped ball into the area and was able to turn and get a shot away. Other than a penalty appeal after three minutes when Ali Coote collided with goalkeeper Martin Zlomisilic – VAR didn't deem it worthy of a review – it was the away side who had all the ball and probed with an intensity that didn't give Shels a second. Niko Jankovic, the talented midfield who may soon be departing to Fenerbahce, showed why he is sought after with a couple of set pieces that, on another night, might have delivered another couple of goals. The Shels boss rejigged things at the break, introducing last week's goal hero Martin for Coote and ensuring the isolated Mipo Odubeko had more support up top. It almost paid off on 53 minutes when McInroy's clipped ball into the left channel and the substitute was onto it in a flash with Odubeko able to peel off into the box. A neat ball was slipped across to the front of the six yard box and while Odubeko was able to make the first connection with his left foot, covering defender Mladen Devetak did enough to ensure he couldn't hit the target. It's easier said than done to be more assertive and confident in possession when the opposition can up the intensity levels but Rijeka definitely didn't seem prepared to put Shels under as much pressure as the first half. And then Dantas received what seemed like a harmless square pass 30 yards out before opening his body at the precise angle that allowed him cut across the ball with a swiftness that saw it fly into the top left corner. Silence again, right until 10 minutes later when the mayhem really began. Harry Wood floated a cross to the back post on 81 minutes and Martin got ahead of Orec. It looked like a desperate attempt to win a penalty until the VAR spotted a pull of the jersey. The wait took the spot kick up until 86 minutes and Odubeko just about converted. He seemed almost too relieved to celebrated, and probably with good reason. Tolka Park was still energised by what some might have felt was a sense of destiny. The Riverside unfurled a banner before kick off calling on the Spirit of 2004 – when they knocked out Hadjuk Split – and when it looked like this might turn into an even more historic night Orec popped up in the other box with a moment – and goal – that was far more decisive. Shels go on in Europe but now it is last chance saloon. Shelbourne: Wessel Speel; Milan Mbeng, Sam Bone, Paddy Barrett, Kameron Ledwidge, James Norris (Evan Caffrey 78); Harry Wood, JJ Lunney (Ellis Chapman 78), Kerr McInroy (Dan Kelly 90+1), Ali Coote (John Martin HT); Mipo Odubeko. Rijeka: Martin Zlomisilic; Ante Orec, Ante Majstorovic, Stjepan Radeljic, Mladen Devetak; Dejan Petrovic, Toni Fruk, Tiago Dantas; Merveil Ndockyt, Ante Matej Juric (Justas Lasickas 75), Niko Jankovic. Referee: Marian Barbu (Rou)

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