Manchester City will step up their quest for a striker this week as they prepare to take their summer spending past £150million.
Target man: but Wolfsburg's £50m asking price for Edin Dzeko may be a stumbling block
City spent £60m last week when they confirmed deals for Jerome Boateng, Yaya Toure and David Silva, and they plan to conclude another £42m worth of business with Lazio's Aleksandar Kolarov and Aston Villa's James Milner over the next few days.
As Sportsmail has revealed, they are significant steps in what will be the biggest spending spree under taken by a British club in one summer, dwarfing the £120m they spent last year, and the piece de resistance is yet to be delivered.
City fear they will miss out on Fernando Torres because of his preference for playing elsewhere if he leaves Liverpool, but the club have other strikers in mind.
They have made a play for Wolfsburg's Edin Dzeko and were alarmed at the German club's £50m demands.
Juventus and Bayern Munich have made counter-offers but the Bosnia international is keen on City and has asked to go. The problem for Dzeko is that fiercely proud Wolfsburg would have to back down.
YAYA TOURE
From Barcelona for £25.5m
DAVID SILVA
From Valencia £24m
JEROME BOATENG
From Hamburg for £10.5m
ROBINHO
Latest
interest from Turkish club Besiktas.
CRAIG BELLAMY
Toss up between Everton and Tottenham.
JO
Probably heading back to Galatasaray. NEDUM ONUOHA
Waiting for Everton to strike a deal. STEPHEN IRELAND
Aston Villa
and Sunderland in pursuit. SHAUN
WRIGHT-PHILLIPS
Villa have made an
enquiry.
GARETH
BARRY
JOLEON LESCOTT
WAYNE BRIDGE
MICAH RICHARDS
Despite City's spending power, illustrated in their willingness to give Silva and Toure £160,000 a week in wages, the club do not want to pay over the odds.
For that reason they have also asked about Mauro Balotelli, the gifted but troubled teenager at Inter Milan, Palermo's Edinson Cavani, Mirko Vucinic of Roma and Real Madrid's Karim Benzema, also a Manchester United target.None is without complication but City never expected their rise to the top to be easy.
They are undertaking a recruitment drive that will stand them in good stead for at least the next five years, sourcing talent for every position and at different tiers from youth level to first team.
Club officials held talks about their plans on Friday and many of the City players who return for pre-season training at Carrington today will, with some justification, be questioning where they fit in.A spending programme of such a scale, in today's financial climate, still needs to be balanced.
As Parma-bound Valeri Bojinov made a sharp exit yesterday, it is safe to as sume Craig Bellamy, Robinho, Nedum Onouha and Stephen Ireland will not be far behind.
Certain recent recruits, such as Patrick Vieira, will have to accept their best role will be on the bench and some players will have to accept they are at Eastlands to help meet the Premier League's 'homegrown' quota.
Indeed, on last season's displays, only Joe Hart and Adam Johnson of the British contingent may be guaranteed a start. They say it is tough at the top. Manager Roberto Mancini may be about to show his players just how true that is.
Manchester City will step up their quest for a striker this week as they prepare to take their summer spending past £175million.
City spent £60m last week when they confirmed deals for Jerome Boateng, Yaya Toure and David Silva, and they plan to conclude another £67m worth of business with Lazio's Aleksandar Kolarov, Benfica's David Luiz and Aston Villa's James Milner over the next few days.
Target man: Wolfsburg's £50m asking price may be too much for Dzeko
As Sportsmail has revealed, they are significant steps in what will be the biggest spending spree under taken by a British club in one summer, dwarfing the £120m they spent last year, and the piece de resistance is yet to be delivered.
City fear they will miss out on Fernando Torres because of his preference for playing elsewhere if he leaves Liverpool, but the club have other strikers in mind.
They have made a play for Wolfsburg's Edin Dzeko and were alarmed at the German club's £50m demands.
Hair-raising prospect: Brazilian defender Luiz (centre) in action for Benfica
YAYA TOURE
From Barcelona for £25.5m
DAVID SILVA
From Valencia £24m
JEROME BOATENG
From Hamburg for £10.5m
ROBINHO
Latest
interest from Turkish club Besiktas.
CRAIG BELLAMY
Toss up between Everton and Tottenham.
JO
Probably heading back to Galatasaray. NEDUM ONUOHA
Waiting for Everton to strike a deal. STEPHEN IRELAND
Aston Villa
and Sunderland in pursuit. SHAUN
WRIGHT-PHILLIPS
Villa have made an
enquiry.
GARETH
BARRY
JOLEON LESCOTT
WAYNE BRIDGE
MICAH RICHARDS
Juventus and Bayern Munich have made counter-offers but the Bosnia international is keen on City and has asked to go. The problem for Dzeko is that fiercely proud Wolfsburg would have to back down.
Despite City's spending power, illustrated in their willingness to give Silva and Toure £160,000 a week in wages, the club do not want to pay over the odds.
For that reason they have also asked about Mario Balotelli, the gifted but troubled teenager at Inter Milan, Palermo's Edinson Cavani, Mirko Vucinic of Roma and Real Madrid's Karim Benzema, also a Manchester United target.
None is without complication but City never expected their rise to the top to be easy.
They are undertaking a recruitment drive that will stand them in good stead for at least the next five years, sourcing talent for every position and at different tiers from youth level to first team.
Club officials held talks about their plans on Friday and many of the City players who return for pre-season training at Carrington today will, with some justification, be questioning where they fit in.
A spending programme of such a scale, in today's financial climate, still needs to be balanced.
Super Mario: Inter Milan striker Balotelli is gifted but has his critics
As Parma-bound Valeri Bojinov made a sharp exit yesterday, it is safe to as sume Craig Bellamy, Robinho, Nedum Onouha and Stephen Ireland will not be far behind.
Certain recent recruits, such as Patrick Vieira, will have to accept their best role will be on the bench and some players will have to accept they are at Eastlands to help meet the Premier League's 'homegrown' quota.
Indeed, on last season's displays, only Joe Hart and Adam Johnson of the British contingent may be guaranteed a start. They say it is tough at the top. Manager Roberto Mancini may be about to show his players just how true that is.
good, very good !
the best is they spend 300m pounds !
let those dumbass ragheads throw their money into the sea !
good, bring in more FTs.. and EPL will grow but at the same time, the national team will die...
its a good thing city are spending.
the money will trickle down.
Originally posted by iceFatboy:good, bring in more FTs.. and EPL will grow but at the same time, the national team will die...
lagi best !!!
England die faster the better................
woo hoo...another club to look at...actually, they just replacing liverpool up there....